lebowski

Volver

Starring: Penélope Cruz Directed by: Pedro Almodóvar
Runtime: 121 min. Rated: R
Release date:
November 3, 2006 - More Info

READER RATINGS:

7.3

OVERALL
Smart . . . . . . . . 7
Sexy . . . . . . . . . 7.4
Funny . . . . . . . . 7.4


The Nerve Review

You'll need a scorecard to keep track of all the folks making their way homeward in Volver, Pedro Almodóvar's latest and most affecting tribute to the beauty, resilience and compassion of all womankind. His title, taken from a ballad performed midway through the film, is the Spanish infinitive "to return," and the narrative involves two sisters, Raimunda (Penélope Cruz) and Sole (Lola Dueñas), whose lives are thrown into (further) disarray by the spectral appearance of their late mother, looking bedraggled and apologetic. That the ghost is played by Carmen Maura, who hasn't worked with Almodóvar since 1988's Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, constitutes another reunion; furthermore, a good hunk of the movie takes place in La Mancha, the director's provincial hometown. And then there's Cruz's belated return to respectability after several misguided years spent as Hollywood's generic Latina eye candy.

Despite all this relaxed familiarity, Volver throbs with a subterranean passion that precludes lazy nostalgia. (Not for nothing does the spectral mom spend most of her time hiding underneath the bed.) Both cheerfully ludicrous and infinitely tender, the movie — which manages to squeeze in a knife murder, two incestuous relationships, a mysterious fire, and an impromptu catering business — flits between farce and melodrama with more assurance and less self-consciousness than any other film of Almodóvar's so-called "mature period." Opening with a magnificent lateral tracking shot across a windswept La Mancha cemetery, as the bereaved diligently polish and adorn headstones like purgatory's maids, it gracefully explores the sway that the dead hold over the living, without ever sacrificing the sheer ebullience and vibrancy that make Pedro's work pop. Is it ultimately a bit slight, as a few grumpy holdouts have charged? Only if you're prepared to ignore the haunting, eerie beauty of its final shot, which serves as compassionate counterpoint to that of The Sweet Hereafter. Egoyan's film insists that certain wounds can never be healed. Almodóvar respectfully begs to differ. — Mike D'Angelo


Other Reviews

Hollywood Reporter
Ray Bennett

"It's very difficult to mesh fantasy with reality, but with great charm and a light touch, Almodovar shows exactly how it should be done."
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Variety
Jonathan Holland

". . .Volver may rep Almodovar's most conventional piece to date, but it is also his most reflective, a subdued, sometimes intense and often comic homecoming that celebrates the pueblo and people that shaped his imagination."
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The New Yorker
Anthony Lane

"The fact that the heroines' feelings are presented as open and raw does not make Volver any less of a concoction — a half-camp, half-noble dream of female solidarity, any grains of bitchiness tossed aside like salt."
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Salon.com
Stephanie Zacharek

"This is a movie about mothers and children that dispatches with the usual goopy sentiment. Volver reassures us that you can go home again — if only in the movies."
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The Village Voice
Rob Nelson

"Red, in every conceivable shade, is, not surprisingly, a key color in Volver, a movie about the towering virtues of high heels and the indomitable power of good old 35mm celluloid. (David Lynch may have gone digital, but this director never will.)"
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The New York Times
A.O. Scott

"Unfolds with breathtaking ease and self-confidence."
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Slant
Ed Gonzalez

"An exceptionally well-crafted work that never threatens to fabulously and spontaneously combust before our eyes. . ."
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