Madrid, 1987
Drama
Storyline
In 1987 Madrid, the unexpected encounter between a seasoned journalist and a young student leads to a profound exploration of love, desire, politics, power, and discovery of each other.
Community Reviews
No community reviews yet.
Reviews from the Web
"Madrid, 1987 is not what youâd call a #metoo-friendly film, which in and of itself is a good reason, though not the only one, to watch it. Miguel (JosĂŠ SacristĂĄn), an old (not to say elderly) columnist, hopes to trick a beautiful young college student named Ăngela (MarĂa Valverde) into having sex with him. There's nothing romantic about this situation, but then writer/director David Trueba is by no means trying to romanticize it. Ăngela wants to be a writer and has written an essay about Miguel, which he has agreed to read; however, he is more interested in sexual than textual matters and soon stops pretending to care in the least about her writing â or, for that matter, his own. In an inversion of Borges' âmany things I have read and few I have livedâ, Miguel tells Ăngela that âbefore, when something important happened to me, I would rush to write about it; now, I would happily stop writing if only something happened to me.â In that spirit, Miguel convinces Ăngela to go with him to the studio of his painter friend Luis â who is conveniently away âin the mountainsâ â, ostensibly to âget to know her betterâ (know her in the biblical sense, that is). Miguel's seduction, if you can call it that, of Ăngela is anything but glamorous, the writer missing with every swing â he asks her to take off her clothes and Ăngela does a half-assed striptease; he pseudo-erotically traces lines on her skin with paint and she gets in the shower to wash them off; he gets in the shower with her and she gets out, and so on and so forth. For a film in which the two leads eventually spend most of the time naked, Madrid, 1987 is counterintuitively and deliberately anti-erotic. They both get locked in the bathroom (Luis having forgotten to warn Miguel about the faulty lock) â by accident, mind you; this is not another of Miguelâs lame attempts, although he definitely sees it as a sign to redouble his efforts to get Ăngela to grant him sexual favors, even if itâs out of pity. Miguel is mostly full of shit â eventually admitting that everything he has said to Ăngela has been a euphemism for 'let's fuck' â, but for all of his sophistry, he manages to cast one or two pearls of wisdom; for example: âin cinema and in literature I like to see people workingâ (echoing Roger Ebertâs statement that âactual work is more interesting than most plotsâ). Now, of Miguel's actual work we catch but a glimpse, and yet he comes across as one of the most genuine fictional writers/journalists I've ever seen in film; the director was himself a freshman journalism student in the titular year, and the character feels like someone the young Trueba might have met back then (under very different circumstances, one should hope)."
Read full review â"The movie is absolutely fantastic and I hope you download it. The film is set in Madrid in 1987, a period when Spain was still going through a transitional phase after Franco's death and its transformation into a democracy."
Read full review âRecommended
The Barefoot Contessa
View Movie â
7 Virgins
View Movie â
Albatross
View Movie â
Unknown Origins
View Movie â