Showing posts with label Elena Anaya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elena Anaya. Show all posts

Friday, 10 May 2013

Day 130: The Skin I Live In



Plastic surgeon Robert Ledgard (Antonio Banderas) is a genius in his field, and after his wife was horrifically burned in a car crash, he attempts to create skin that is impervious to damage. Do not read ahead, there are going to be so many spoilers and really, you just have to watch this beauty of a film.

The sequence in which we are presented with the story is perfect. We see Robert with his patient, Vera (Elena Anaya), and we are shown how strong her skin is now (he burns her and yet she doesn't feel it and her skin is undamaged). She is kept in a locked room and she only sees Robert, interaction with anyone else takes place over an intercom and her food is delivered by a dumb waiter. She has covered the wall in writing, marking the days of her stay like a prisoner. And that definitely seems to be what she is. When Robert comes to see her she says they should be together and it would seem like she has Stockholm Syndrome, but that is not necessarily true upon seeing the rest of the film. We are shown years before, he saved his wife despite her extensive injuries but when she saw a reflection of herself she jumped from a window and died in front of her young daughter, Norma (Blanca Suárez). She suffers psychological issues, presumably from this event, and is cared for in a psychiatric ward. Her doctor assumes that she is well enough to go outside and so she accompanies her father to a party. However, at the party she is raped and her psychological trauma worsens, leading her to kill herself in the same manner as her mother.

The man who raped her, Vicente (Jan Cornet), is kidnapped by Robert and kept in his basement for a long time. Robert comes to him, shaves his facial hair, drugs him and takes him to the operating theatre he has in his house where Vicente undergoes sex reassignment surgery and his name is changed to Vera. I am unsure of the correct pronouns to use here (I know I used female pronouns earlier but that's only because the facts of the story are obviously not clear from the beginning) but since ‘Vera’ did not choose to have the operation and seemed horrified at the changes, I will use male pronouns (if that’s wrong I am happy to change them). Breasts develop and his voice becomes more feminine, and with Robert’s skin project, he becomes ‘perfect’. The face, because his face was all remodelled, resembles that of Robert’s late wife and this seems to have quite the psychological hold over him. After his brother breaks in and rapes Vera, Robert kills him and becomes intimate with Vera, calling him ‘my love.’ He promises to stay with him and Robert promises not to keep him locked in a room anymore but when the opportunity comes, he kills Robert and returns to his mother.

At the beginning of the film, Robert is giving a lecture on facial reconstruction of burn victims and he says that our face identifies us, it is essentially who we are. It’s never clearer how much he believes this than when he looks at Vera and only sees his wife. He doesn’t see that Vera was the man who raped his daughter, it’s as if who Vera is doesn’t matter, it’s who he looks like that does. For a plastic surgeon to put so much emphasis on the external aspects of a person isn’t necessarily surprising but what is surprising is the importance of who this person actually is and that it has little impact on Robert. What he sees is someone who looks just like the woman he loved and that is all he sees. I think that’s fascinating. Do we really put so much importance on how people look? If, for instance, you woke up and your mother had a different face, would that impact on how you felt about her? What about your partner? Or your child?

When I was younger I experienced something similar to what is known as ‘The Capgras Delusion’. I say something similar because the experience was only really with my father and it only lasted when I was younger, it doesn’t happen now. People with the Capgras Delusion believe that someone close to them has been replaced by an imposter who looks exactly identical to the person they are meant to be. It is frightening and I’m thankful it only lasted for a little time. I only mention it because it seems relevant to the ideas thrown up by the film. The person I thought was an imposter looked just like my father and yet I felt that it wasn’t him. There wasn’t a connection between what he looked like and who he was. In the film, the connection between who Vera looked like and who Vera actually was was lost. And instead who Vera was became entwined with who he looked like. Faces are important to how we operate in our lives and this film explores the extremes of that importance.

What an amazing film. Antonio Banderas was wonderful in this character, he managed to give off the appearance of someone calm and composed while all the while he’s going through some serious psychological issues. The film was beautifully shot and each scene was subtle and powerful.

10/10

Sunday, 24 March 2013

Day 83: Sex and Lucía


The lives and stories of several people are beautifully told and all are interwoven in interesting ways. Lorenzo (Tristán Ulloa) writes about what is happening in his life and we see what he writes as his girlfriend, Lucía, secretly reads along. But when she believes that Lorenzo is dead, Lucía takes off to the island that was important to him as a young man.


Lucía talks to Lorenzo for the first time, telling him that his book had a hold of her and wouldn’t let go, and that she loves him and thinks they should live together. She says that he will grow to love her. He looks at her, tells her that he thinks he already does love her and agrees that they should live together. My description of it probably doesn’t do it justice but it was actually brilliant, I love that they did that. I’ve always wondered how interesting it would be to do something like that. They both get completely drunk and head back to his, she tells him to do whatever he wants to her but she can barely stay conscious. For a minute I was panicking that this was going to go terribly but he just lies down next to her and they sleep. In the morning she has a look through the house that they’ll now both be living in together while he sleeps, and then she goes back to bed and wakes him up with sex. Throughout the film there is a lot of sex. A lot. Usually I’m not the biggest fan of sex in films but it was really well done here.

Perhaps the one character that is the most fascinating would have to be Belén (Elena Anaya). She is Lorenzo’s daughter’s nanny and over a short period of time she gets to know Lorenzo and confides in him. Her mother is a retired porn star who is in love and living with a man that Belén finds herself attracted to. She tells Lorenzo that she gets excited by watching her mum in the porn films, and that she has masturbated using her mum’s own dildo while watching her mum on screen. (my notes: "What.") Belén and Lorenzo are looking after his daughter and when she goes to sleep they start to have sex. But then it all goes mental and the dog that lives with them attacks and kills the little girl. Belén is obviously traumatised by it all and she tries to kill herself. It was such a fascinating story. I liked that when she was telling Lorenzo about her secret mum story he was totally accepting and non-judgemental.

Do not watch this with family members or anyone you get uncomfortable around. So much sex, I cannot stress that enough.

“The first advantage is at the end of the story. It doesn’t finish, it falls in a hole. And the story starts again halfway through. The other advantage, and the biggest, is that you can change course along the way. If you let me. If you give me time.”

9/10