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Pedro, Borat, and a castrato

The 31st Toronto International Film Festival
By GERALD PEARY  |  September 20, 2006

060922_volver_main
PENÉLOPE CRUZ: Mr. Film Culture landed five minutes with the star of Volver.

As usual, dedicated film critics were too occupied seeing four or five movies a day to note the swarm of A-list celebrities at the 31st Toronto International Film Festival, except through newspaper chatter (J-Lo in town with her new husband; Michael Moore cavorting with Yoko Ono), or when the public filled us in. “I waited five hours to see Brad Pitt,” a woman told me, happily, on the subway. “He looked very nice, in a nice suit.” But my Nigerian cabbie was put off that he’d observed Brad and Angelina walking down a street. “They’re very rich,” he snarled, wishing them out of Canada.

Okay, I did see Mena Suvari across a hotel lobby, and Brian De Palma, a film freak, came in and out of movies. But my best chance to meet a bona fide star was to request a formal interview. That’s how I landed five minutes with Spain’s Penélope Cruz, the gorgeously brown-eyed lead in Pedro Almodóvar’s VOLVER. She plays a single mom who opens a restaurant and who covers up for her killer daughter, plot borrowings from Mildred Pierce (1945). Had Almodóvar, a movie buff, required her to study the Joan Crawford melodrama?

“I saw Mildred Pierce on my own,” Cruz said. “He asked me to watch Italian neo-realism: Sophia Loren in Two Women and Anna Magnani in Bellissima and Mamma Roma. He wanted for me that messy look of a woman who does her make-up very quickly in the morning because she’s too tired to put it on right.” Volver includes a clip of Magnani heartbroken on the telephone in Roberto Rossellini’s 1948 L’amore. Cruz: “Magnani’s monologue has a lot of suffering, which is our movie. Though the situations were funny in Volver, we had to forget we were doing comedy and play them absolutely straight. Characters suffer, yet the audience can laugh. Volver is about the ironies of life.”

At Cannes in May, Volver was expected to capture the Palme d’Or. Instead, the winner was Ken Loach’s THE WIND THAT SHAKES THE BARLEY, with Gillian Murphy as an Irish doctor turned unrepentant IRA militant. Was the Cannes jury misguided? Neither work is a masterpiece. I like the Loach film a little better for its vivid historical re-creations of 1920s Ireland, though the Almodóvar is formally more accomplished and Cruz is swell. But Volver, a women-centered story of mothers and sisters and maybe existing ghosts, is a bit stagnant and musty.

The most popular film at the fest? Larry Charles’s BORAT: CULTURAL LEARNINGS OF AMERICA FOR MAKE BENEFIT GLORIOUS NATION OF KAZAKHSTAN, starring Sacha Baron Cohen. Toronto had “Borat fever,” everyone repeating anti-PC jokes from this divinely silly road movie in which the malaprop-riddled Kazakh crosses stupidly redneck America to find, and forcibly marry, Pamela Anderson. With his Borat and his Camus-spouting Gallic homo in Talladega Nights, Cohen is the new Big Deal of Hollywood comedy.

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  Topics: Film Culture , Celebrity News, Entertainment, Sophia Loren,  More more >
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