It’s the film that critics are hailing as Woody Allan’s return to form. Vicky Cristina Barcelona has become one of the most talked about movies of the year. A sizzling, erotically charged, relentlessly hilarious and touching romantic comedy that won Penelope Cruz (Volver, Vanilla Sky) a Best Performance By An .. Read more
| Starring | Scarlett Johansson, Rebecca Hall, Javier Bardem, Chris Messina |
|---|---|
| Director | Woody Allen |
| Genres | Comedy, Drama, Romance |
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Woody Allens European tour heads south to Spain for a funny, lusty film that will have fans breathing a sigh of... read more on Time Out
After a spate of rather lack lustre films from Woody Allens comes this little gem. Great dialogue, with many laugh out loud lines delivered buy some stand-out performances from Javier Bardem, Penelope Cruz and our own Rebecca Hall, masterful direction of Mr Allen. I loved it and it was wonderful surprise.
Pointless and lame plot leading nowhere. Hardly a laugh in it, inane rubbish. Worst film I've seen in ages.
A title to tell you I'm writing a review? No need for that, of course. However, the narration of Vicky Christina Barcelona offered nothing more inciteful of the scenes in the film. As Vicky and Christina take a walk in the evening we are told 'Vicky and Christina take a walk in the evening'. I wondered if I'd sat down to the blind screening.
Sadly, the opening half of the film did nothing to take my mind off this continuing irritation. Scarlett Johansson and Rebecca Hall offer passable performances but have little impact. Javier Bardem is convincing as the lothario responsible for the ensuing romatic twists. However, the pace is dramatically lifted with the arrival of Penelope Cruz who offers an electrifying performance of deservedly oscar quality. It's as if she takes on a single handed crusade to turn what is emerging as a lightweight bit of cinema fodder into a serious venture. More of her would have made the experience bearable but in the end the simplistic plot and daft voiceover put me off recommending it or wishing to sit through it again, despite Cruz's efforts.
Well filmed, well acted, picturesque, Tosh.
Not a laugh out loud film, not a laugh at all, apart, possibly, from the naive perambulations of 2 americans in Spain. Acting from all concerned was good, how I managed to stick with it owes more to the promise than the actuality. Once again, Tosh.
This film is worth watching for Penelope Cruz's performance. She makes a great hot tempered catalan artist and her dialogue in spanish is raw and natural. Highly convincing to me.
I also enjoyed identifying 90.5 % of the film's locations sitting on my UK living room in a rainy summer night.
Having said that, everything else in this film is as if Allen had been commissioned by the Barcelona Tourist Board.
I am from Barcelona and I am a photographer, I have lived in the old quarter for years and this film does not portray in any way the art life and true essence of my city. It's all about some middle class American fantasy and Barcelona is just a pretty background.
Javier Bardem makes his best but his character doesn't make any sense to me. He is supposed to be a Catalan painter, but he was born in Oviedo ( that is nowhere near Catalonia) He should have been this intense mediterranean man born in a place more like the Emporda, his dad should have been catalan too and living in a beautiful secluded Masia.
I love Woody Allen, but just like in Match Point, he had a great script , great cast and ruined it with stereotypical nonsense.
Please go back to Manhattan !
After a spate of rather lack lustre films from Woody Allens comes this little gem. Great dialogue, with many laugh out loud lines delivered buy some stand-out performances from Javier Bardem, Penelope Cruz and our own Rebecca Hall, masterful direction of Mr Allen. I loved it and it was wonderful surprise.
Pointless and lame plot leading nowhere. Hardly a laugh in it, inane rubbish. Worst film I've seen in ages.
A title to tell you I'm writing a review? No need for that, of course. However, the narration of Vicky Christina Barcelona offered nothing more inciteful of the scenes in the film. As Vicky and Christina take a walk in the evening we are told 'Vicky and Christina take a walk in the evening'. I wondered if I'd sat down to the blind screening.
Sadly, the opening half of the film did nothing to take my mind off this continuing irritation. Scarlett Johansson and Rebecca Hall offer passable performances but have little impact. Javier Bardem is convincing as the lothario responsible for the ensuing romatic twists. However, the pace is dramatically lifted with the arrival of Penelope Cruz who offers an electrifying performance of deservedly oscar quality. It's as if she takes on a single handed crusade to turn what is emerging as a lightweight bit of cinema fodder into a serious venture. More of her would have made the experience bearable but in the end the simplistic plot and daft voiceover put me off recommending it or wishing to sit through it again, despite Cruz's efforts.
The story follows bland, but bearable American tourists, Vicky and Christina, and their summer holiday to liberal Catalonian Barcelona. As this is a Woody Allen film, they stay in a huge villa in the beautiful mountains near Barcelona (complete with servants), dont get anywhere near a days work and socialise with wealthy city types and liberal artistic Europeans. Its a little piece of Manhattan in the south of Spain. Through these social circles the girls meet the charismatic artist Javier Bardem and his frantic ex-wife played by Penelope Cruz. The ensuing film concerns the girls and their love triangle, or should that be love square, with Javier Bardem and his beautiful, if unstable ex-wife.
All sounds like a usual Woody Allen film with trademark average performances, along with portentous dialogue about love, life and its meanings. However, Javier Bardem and the Oscar winning Penelope Cruz really separate this from the majority of Allens previous work and definitely make it worth a watch. The emotive Spanish guitar soundtrack, witty dialogue that doesnt get too pseudo intellectual and beautiful Catalan landscapes, make sure this is a return to form from Woody Allen, although not an entirely memorable one.
Brilliant film i loved it, fast moving, interesting and emotional, i really recommend watching it.
The movie is briliant, excellent dialogues, beautiful places of Barcelona. Penelepe really shines and she surely deserves Oscar for this. The movie keeps your attention from the very beginning until the end.
I really did not see what all the fuss was about. It always bugs me when trailers try to sell a movie as something it is not quite.
The years funniest comedy? No, I may have smirked once or twice, but this is not a 'comed'y.
If you like woody allen movies, and the stars involved (who do act well) youll likely to enjoy, but if you are decidng to view based on how it was sold on the trailer, you may be dissapointed.
And, if I wanted to spend a couple of hours listening to a woman scream and moan histerically at a member of the opposite sex, I would simply have gone round the in-laws and saved the rental fee ;-)
I'm not a Woody Allen fan. I have seen a few of his films, which I thought were too verbose and intellectually pretentious.
But this, his latest is nothing like his previous work.This film explores the incredibly complicated dynamics of a relationship involving one man and three women. It's dark in parts but manages to stay balanced with many funny and breezily light scenes and dialogue (not in a ha-ha kind of way as one of the reviewers expected it to be).It looks at how emotionally damaged people interact in search for love and completeness. This film is like peeling back the layers of an onion, the viewer keeps being drawn in to something interesting and learning something more. Essentially this movie takes the viewer on a journey and it's a really vivid, colourful and passionate one, just like the city Barcelona .The only thing I would fault is the limpily unoriginal movie title.
Drivel. No plot. The narration is pointless. A US view of Bohemian Europe.
People keep saying how good Allen is (can be?) and that this was a 'return to form'. Well I'd hate to suffer one of his 'flops'! Whilst beautifully cinematic with a very strong romantic enchantment, the only reason I stuck with it to the end was the performance of Bardem. As with 'No Country For Old Men', he is the best thing in this by far. I don't get Johansson's appeal either and, other than a quick glance at her tits, she did nothing for me. Cruz is always reliable, but 'Best Supporting Oscar'? Again, other than a quick side shot of her right tit, she did nothing to excite me.
Woody Allens European tour heads south to Spain for a funny, lusty film that will have fans breathing a sigh of... read more on Time Out