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Bad Education

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Bad Education (2004)

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Reviews Counted:131

Fresh:116

Rotten:15

Average Rating:7.6/10

Consensus: A layered, wonderfully-acted, and passionate drama.

Runtime: 1 hr 49 mins

Genre: Dramas

US Box Office: $4,977,869

Synopsis: Madrid, 1980: Enrique Goded, a young director of twenty-seven who, despite his youth, has already directed three successful films, is looking through the news in the tabloids for a story for his... Madrid, 1980: Enrique Goded, a young director of twenty-seven who, despite his youth, has already directed three successful films, is looking through the news in the tabloids for a story for his fourth film. (One item in particular attracts his attention and he cuts it out: "In a zoo in Taiwan, a woman threw herself into a pool full of crocodiles at a time when there was the greatest number of visitors. While the crocodiles were devouring her, the woman hugged one of them without making a sound.") The doorbell rings. The visitor is an attractive young man with a beard who says he is his old school friend, Ignacio Rodríguez. Enrique remembers his school friend perfectly, but he doesn’t recognize any of his features in the young visitor. But it’s also true that they haven’t seen each other for sixteen years. Enrique doesn’t know it yet, but the search for the story for his next film is in front of him, smiling and holding out his hand. In their school days, Ignacio had a literary vocation, but he gradually gave it up for that of acting. In any case, he has brought a short story called "The Visit." He gives it to Enrique in case it might interest him. The story was inspired by their childhood in the school, their problems with the priests, in particular with the Principal, the repression, the soccer games, the hypocrisy, the distortion of the spirit, the harassment, the masses sung in Latin by Ignacio who was the soloist in the choir, etc. It also tells, in parallel, of an essential discovery for the two kids - the cinema: Sara Montiel, "Hercules," "Breakfast at Tiffany’s," "Moon River," "Johnny Guitar," etc. The imagination of Ignacio-author has the three characters – himself, Enrique, and the Principal – meet (in the short story) years later, when they are adults. Enrique, although still young, has become a frustrated family man in the provinces, Father Manolo has left the congregation, and Ignacio has become Zahara. Zahara is a drug addict transvestite who impersonates Sara Montiel (a sort of Spanish Mae West Gay icon of the '60s and '70s) and is a member of a fifth-rate variety company. The story is told from Zahara’s point of view on the night she performs in a Casino in the same city where Enrique and he went to school. The encounter between the three characters, in the short story, ends tragically. Enrique Goded reads "The Visit" with great interest. He is moved by the first part, which deals with their childhood, in particular, his love story with Ignacio, which was broken up by Father Manolo. In love with Ignacio, Father Manolo expelled Enrique from the school so as not to have to compete with him. The second part, when Ignacio (who has now become Zahara) visits the school disconcerts him, but it also interests him. He decides to adapt "The Visit" and make it into a film. When he tells Ignacio (who insists that Enrique call him by his current stage name Ángel Andrade), the latter explodes with joy. He only imposes one condition, that he acts in the film. Enrique doesn’t mind, but when Ignacio (Ángel) asks to play the lead, that is, the transvestite Zahara, Enrique tells him that he isn’t right for the character (neither does he understand the request). He is too masculine, too well built, physically he is just the opposite to a character like Zahara. Ignacio (Ángel) insists, and asks Enrique to trust him. Enrique replies that he finds it very hard to trust him, and they end up having a violent argument. Ignacio (Ángel) goes off, saying that if he doesn’t play Zahara there won’t be any film. In the days following the argument, Enrique can’t get the mysterious visitor out of his mind. He investigates - after all that’s one of the storyteller’s jobs, investigating his characters in depth in order to understand them better and tell them better – and discovers that the attractive boy who came to ask for work is not Ignacio Rodríguez but an impostor who had access to the real Ignacio. He also discovers that the real Ignacio died three years earlier, shortly after writing "The Visit." The shock of the discovery increases when, a few days later, Ángel Andrade (the false Ignacio) visits him again. He has shaved his beard and slimmed down a little. Enrique thinks he has come to apologize and to explain everything, but it isn’t so. The false Ignacio apologizes for the violent argument they had the last time they met, and offers Enrique the rights of "The Visit" to make a film of it, without imposing any conditions. Enrique doesn’t say a word about Ignacio or mention his imposture at any time. He only asks to be allowed to audition for the role of Zahara. (Enrique listens to him in astonishment). As he can see, Ángel has already slimmed down and he has also started working in a gay bar in order to learn how to be a "queen." Ángel is also receiving private lessons from Sandra, a transvestite who specializes in impersonating Sara Montiel. Enrique auditions him, gives him the part and makes him his lover. He wants to know the impostor’s reasons and how far he will go with his imposture, and he wants to know how Ignacio, his old school friend, died. He doesn’t care what price he has to pay for the adventure. Long months of preparation go by. The first day of shooting on "The Visit" arrives, and so does the last one. Enrique penetrates Ángel Andrade frequently, but only physically. He doesn’t manage to discover anything about Ignacio’s death and Angel’s mystery remains intact. But on the last day someone visits the set and hides behind the crew in order to see without being seen. When Enrique goes back to his office to gather up his things, he catches the mysterious stranger in there, rummaging through photos from the shoot. The visitor calls himself by his last name, Mr. Berenguer, but Enrique recognizes Father Manolo, dressed in civilian clothes and seventeen years older than the last time he saw him, the day he expelled him from the school. Now it is Enrique who expels him from his office. But Mr. Berenguer remains motionless and asks him: "Don’t you want to know how Ignacio died and who killed him? Wouldn’t you like to know the identity of Ángel Andrade, the actor in your film?" Driven by the same suicidal curiosity that led him to work with Ángel Andrade while knowing he was an impostor, Enrique lets Father Manolo tell him the true story of Ignacio-adult and as he listens he feels like the woman who threw herself into the pool of crocodiles and hugged them while they ate her. -- © Sony Pictures Classics [More]

Starring: Gael Garcia Bernal, Fele Martinez, Javier Camara, Daniel Gimenez-Cacho

Starring: Gael Garcia Bernal, Fele Martinez, Javier Camara, Daniel Gimenez-Cacho, Lluis Homar, Francisco Boira, Francisco Maestre, Juan Fernández, Ignacio Perez, Alberto Ferreiro, Petra Martinez, Roberto Hoyas

Director: Pedro Almodóvar

Director: Pedro Almodóvar
Screenwriter: Pedro Almodovar
Producer: Agustin Almodovar
Composer: Alberto Iglesias
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics

[See More Credits]

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Reviews for Bad Education

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81 - 100 (sorted by date; Australian critics are listed first)
Text View | |< << 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 >> >|
Arrange By:Fresh | Rotten | Comments | Name | Source | Date
 
 

It is Bernal himself who sticks in your head the most.

Full Review Source: L.A. Weekly | comment Comment
12/09/04
Scott Foundas
Scott Foundas
L.A. Weekly

It’s ironic that the last image that Pedro Almodovar’s Bad Education offers us is a close-up of the Spanish word 'pasión,' because the film feels far too rarefied and precise for its own good.

Full Review Source: MovieMartyr.com | comment Comment
12/05/04
Jeremy Heilman
Jeremy Heilman
MovieMartyr.com

From the beauteous Bernal to the deep color and frames within frames, this gay melodrama / noir / mystery is a special mix.

Full Review Source: Film Experience | comment Comment
11/30/04
Nathaniel Rogers
Nathaniel Rogers
Film Experience

A dense, audacious film in which layers of cinematic artifice lovingly camouflage (at least for a while) its characters' dark, damaged heart.

Full Review Source: Premiere Magazine | comment Comment
11/23/04
Glenn Kenny
Glenn Kenny
Premiere Magazine

Part childhood romance, part film noir, part A Star is Born, the film delights in the interplay of surfaces and identities, the painful, shifting masquerade of art and life.

Full Review Source: Not Coming to a Theater Near You | comment Comment
11/23/04
Leo Goldsmith
Leo Goldsmith
Not Coming to a Theater Near You

An hour in, everything in the movie is upended in a way that is not so much difficult to swallow as simply out of left field.

Full Review Source: culturevulture.net | comment Comment
11/23/04
George Wu
George Wu
culturevulture.net

Where Talk To Her moved me in serious ways, Education just sat there flat in all its twisted coolness.

Full Review Source: Entertainment Insiders | comment Comment
11/22/04
Jonathan W. Hickman
Jonathan W. Hickman
Entertainment Insiders

It's all incredibly complicated but, intensely fascinating.

Full Review Source: Ebert & Roeper | comment Comment
11/22/04
Richard Roeper
Richard Roeper
Ebert & Roeper
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Journal News (Westchester, NY) | comment Comment
11/20/04
Christy Lemire
Christy Lemire
Journal News (Westchester, NY)

Almodovar never stops maturing or losing his supreme mastery of the medium.

Full Review Source: Newsday | comment Comment
11/20/04
John Anderson
John Anderson
Newsday

True to form, Almodóvar gets unimpeachable performances from his cast (particularly Bernal...) and paints his frames with gleefully lurid strokes.

Full Review Source: Groucho Reviews | comment Comment
11/20/04
Peter Canavese
Peter Canavese
Groucho Reviews

Almodóvar's movies always provide some sort of education.

Full Review Source: PopMatters | comment Comment
11/19/04
Cynthia Fuchs
Cynthia Fuchs
PopMatters

By turns enthralling, seductive and deeply disturbing, Almodovar's tragic fable is steeped in a swooning sense of passion's power to inspire, pervert and destroy that draws the fractured narrative into a satisfying whole.

Full Review Source: TV Guide's Movie Guide | comment Comment
11/19/04
Maitland McDonagh
Maitland McDonagh
TV Guide's Movie Guide

It's best not to spill too many more beans -- only to say that Gael García Bernal is the real thing.

Full Review Source: Slate | comment Comment
11/19/04
David Edelstein
David Edelstein
Slate

Almodovar has taken the classic film noir and given it a new spin -- there are no gumshoes, no smoking gun, just one lone film director confronting humanity's black heart.

Full Review Source: Reel.com | comment Comment
11/19/04
Pam Grady
Pam Grady
Reel.com

As usual ... it's Almodóvar who's the star here, filling the screen with bold compositions and melodramatic passion.

Full Review Source: Newark Star-Ledger | comment Comment
11/19/04
Stephen Whitty
Stephen Whitty
Newark Star-Ledger

Owes much to Bernal, who stunningly portrays three distinct personalities.

Full Review Source: New York Post | comment Comment
11/19/04
V.A. Musetto
V.A. Musetto
New York Post

Gloriously feverish ode to what drives us to do things great and terrible.

Full Review Source: New York Daily News | comment Comment
11/19/04
Jami Bernard
Jami Bernard
New York Daily News

There are several good reasons to see Bad Education, but one great one: Gael García Bernal.

Full Review Source: E! Online | comment Comment
11/19/04
E! Online
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

The best thing about Pedro Almodóvar movies is how you can never tell where they're going.

Full Review Source: Window to the Movies | comment Comment
11/18/04
Jeffrey Chen
Jeffrey Chen
Window to the Movies
 
 
81 - 100 (sorted by date; Australian critics are listed first)
Text View | |< << 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 >> >|
all

Latest News for Bad Education

May 20, 2009: Cannes 2009: The Tomato Report – Almodovar's Broken Embraces a Comfortable Favourite
Pedro Almodovar is a firm favourite in Cannes, so it's no surprise to see his new film Broken Embraces receiving largely positive reviews from the assembled critics. The... More...

November 24, 2004: Bad Education Still NC-17
More...

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