A young man, Enrique (played by Fele Martinez) is working as a film director. He is visited by a childhood friend Ignacio Rodriguez (played by Gael Garcia Bernal), who is looking for work. Before he leaves Ignacio gives Enrique a book that he has written called 'The Visit'. The story centres around the lives of two young boys .. Read more
| Starring | Gael Garcia Bernal, Fele Martinez, Daniel Gimenez Cacho |
|---|---|
| Director | Pedro Almodovar |
| Genres | Drama, World Cinema |
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A young man, Enrique (played by Fele Martinez) is working as a film director. He is visited by a childhood friend Ignacio Rodriguez (played by Gael Garcia Bernal), who is looking for work. Before he leaves Ignacio gives Enrique a book that he has written called 'The Visit'. The story centres around the lives of two young boys who attend a Catholic School. Enrique decides to make a film based on the book which is set to resurrect his own childhood. The film visits three time periods. The past features the Catholic School where two young boys come of age and begin to have feelings for one another and the influence their teacher has on their lives, priest Father Manolo (played by Daniel Gimenez Cacho). The director Pedro Almodovar weaves the story through the 70s and 80s, and pre and post-Franco Spain. A compelling drama.
| Starring | Gael Garcia Bernal, Fele Martinez, Daniel Gimenez Cacho |
|---|---|
| Director | Pedro Almodovar |
| Studio | PATHE DISTRIBUTION |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 46 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama, World Cinema |
| Language | Spanish |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Subtitles | English |
| Released | DVD: 27 Dec 2004 Production year: 2004 |
| Format | DVD |
Pedro Almodóvar goes back to his roots with this latest offering, inspired by his childhood experiences at a Catholic boarding school. An expansion of a plot thread from his 1987 black comedy The Law of Desire, this opens in 1980 in the offices of rising film-maker Fele Martínez. He is approached by an old school pal (Gael García Bernal), who has a story entitled The Visit. The friend is revealed to be the director's boyhood love and elements of their story populate The Visit, including the abuse Bernal suffered at the hands of a priest. Martínez agrees to film the story with wannabe actor Bernal in the lead, but soon discovers that his leading man is living a shocking lie. Though Almodóvar skilfully manipulates his labyrinthine storyline (aided by Bernal's versatile performance), he overcomplicates this tribute to Hollywood melodrama with too many heavy-handed references to films noirs, Vertigo and Spanish gay icon Sara Montiel. Those who adored his more thoughtful recent movies — All about My Mother, Talk to Her — may find this a rather superficial regression.
Almodóvar spins a serpentine story of a sentimental miseducation through a virtuoso spectrum of hues, from the... read more on Time Out
This tale of two friends who meet after being in school years before has all the wonderful touchs of a Pedro film. It has the vivid characters, the colourful characters and the fantastic set pieces but this one has added a slight difference and that is the Hitchcock touch. The script and acting are wonderful and the plot twists make you excited to watch more to see how it all pans out.
This is one of Pedro's best (in my book) and would recommend this to all lovers of European cinema.
Have waited so long to see this film but the wait was well worth while. Played it over three times before slipping it back in the envelope.
Garcia Bernal is perfectly cast and I have now listed all his previous films and await their arrival with anticipation.
Pedro Almodovar's Bad Education looks set to sweep the floor at this year's European Film Awards with seven nominations. The Spanish film is tipped for best director and best screenwriter prizes among others at the ceremony in Barcelona tomorrow night. Mike's Leigh's gritty film about abortion, Vera Drake, is also among the nominees, with lead Imelda Staunton up for best actress. Britain's lovey director Richard Curtis, the man behind Love Actually and Notting Hill, is tipped for the popular... Read more