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      Lola: The Movie

      NC-17 2007 1h 56m Biography Drama List
      Reviews 74% Audience Score 50+ Ratings Lola Flores (Gala Évora) becomes a famous flamenco dancer, singer and actress, and has a stormy relationship with singer Manolo Caracol (José Luis García Pérez). Read More Read Less

      Critics Reviews

      View All (3) Critics Reviews
      Rene Rodriguez Miami Herald Rated: 3/4 Aug 24, 2010 Full Review Jason Bailey DVDTalk.com Rated: 1/5 Aug 23, 2010 Full Review Ron Wilkinson Monsters and Critics Not the knockout punch of his previous Kinatay or Serbis but an unvarnished look into the inner-workings of a world forced to brutality. Rated: 7/10 Sep 16, 2010 Full Review Read all reviews

      Audience Reviews

      View All (13) audience reviews
      Audience Member ...a searing tale of empathy and suffering exploring two characters from opposing sides of a harsh situation. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/22/23 Full Review Audience Member A bit different from Mendoza's other films like Serbis and Kinatay, but still this one has its punch to the soul through its magnificent story, screenplay, acting and direction.... Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/20/23 Full Review Audience Member What a strange but humane movie.. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/16/23 Full Review Audience Member Another poverty porn from Mendoza. I greatly appreciate the no melodrama approach eventhough it's so ripe with possibilities. I was just waiting for an explosive confrontation between Linda and Carpio instead Mendoza showed us what real people do. I love the funeral procession thru the flooded street! Just brilliant! I'm giving it more points for the two veteran leads ... they're just amazing. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/26/23 Full Review Audience Member Just when I thought that Brillante Mendoza will not get out of his trend of sexual and disturbingly putrid depictions of the modern downsides of Philippine society, here he comes bringing "Lola", a painful, yet at times comic, observation of two striving grandmothers on opposite sides of a situation (one whose grandson is the victim and the other, the suspect) trying to cope up with the tragic trails, including financial shortcomings, brought forth by an uneasy crime. Anita Linda and Rustica Carpio, both past their physical primes, may have just given their more-than-impressive swan songs. Director Mendoza, who is not that much known on squeezing out pure performances from his actors/actresses (as his characters usually just blend in into the realistic palette of the surroundings), handled may be the two most astounding ones from aged performers. In some ways, it's almost a miraculous feat on his part (and cinematographer Odyssey Flores) in terms of enhancing Anita Linda and Rustica Carpio's natural and honest evocation of suppressed sufferings and prolonged sacrifices as impoverished grandparents through a panoramic view of the present social state of those inflicted with destitution. But the real highlight is of course from the two brave, nagging, and at times, swindling heroines who will do just about anything not just to resolve their numerous woes, mostly involving money, but also to unconsciously prove their 'worth'. Throughout the film, as the camera follows them both, we see them express stern authority to younger people, ask for directions and assistance like one, and show extreme determination like middle-aged fellows. They embody the three stages of life based on the entirety of their characteristics. Their bodies show the tweaks of aging, but when, as they say, push comes to shove, their minds does not. But in one specific sequence that is arguably the most resonant in the film, our protagonists engage in a very subtle, open and realistic conversation about the simple realities of old age. Many times, I have overheard old people talking. No, they do not talk about transcendent and elegiac things such as existence and life affirmations. Instead, they talk about the most trivial of things such as aching bodies, rheumatism and efficascent oils. Brillante Mendoza captured the sequence with lightness and sheer minimalism. Amid the laborious small journeys here and there, this scene is their break. They do not reflect upon paradoxical things about their hardships but merely talk with a sense of common likeness. Although being the opposites in a tragedy, they share the beauty of human 'connection'. At times visually and thematically similar with Nagisa Oshima (based especially on his explicitly unrelenting "Serbis" and "Kinatay"), Brillante Mendoza departed from the comparison to simply tell a poignant story. And what makes "Lola" even more fascinating albeit at times being emotionally painful is its underlying tenderness that treats these aged heroines of life not as urban sufferers but as rare triumphants. Mendoza has already channeled the polarizing alternatives of cinema, but with "Lola", he may have glanced on some of De Sica and Ozu's brushstrokes and created an absorbing and empathetic film about human struggles and tribulations. Anita Linda and Rustica Carpio's performances made it all the more affecting. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/12/23 Full Review Audience Member Two lives intertwine Seeking justice, forgiveness Ends sans redemption. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/24/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis Lola Flores (Gala Évora) becomes a famous flamenco dancer, singer and actress, and has a stormy relationship with singer Manolo Caracol (José Luis García Pérez).
      Director
      Miguel Hermoso
      Producer
      Jaume Santacana, Juan Carlos Caro
      Screenwriter
      Antonio Onetti
      Rating
      NC-17
      Genre
      Biography, Drama
      Original Language
      Spanish (Spain)
      Runtime
      1h 56m
      Sound Mix
      Dolby Digital