Matador (film)

Matador is a 1986 Spanish erotic thriller film co-written and directed by Pedro Almodóvar about a student matador, Ángel Giménez (Antonio Banderas), who confesses to murders he did not commit.

Matador
Theatrical release poster by Carlos Berlanga
Directed byPedro Almodóvar
Screenplay by
Story byPedro Almodóvar
Produced byAndrés Vicente Gómez
Starring
CinematographyÁngel Luis Fernández
Edited byPepe Salcedo
Music byBernardo Bonezzi
Production
companies
Distributed byIberoamericana Distribución
Release date
  • 7 March 1986 (1986-03-07) (Spain)
Running time
106 minutes
CountrySpain
LanguageSpanish
Box office$210,318[1]

Plot

Diego Montes is a former bullfighter who was forced into early retirement after being gored. He finds sexual gratification by viewing slasher films. Among the students in his bullfighting class is Ángel, a diffident young man who suffers from vertigo. During one episode of vertigo in the practice ring, Ángel has a vision of a woman killing a man with a hairpin during sex, in a manner similar to how a matador kills a bull. After class, Diego asks Ángel if he is homosexual, noting that he is not experienced with women. Ángel says he is not and vows to prove himself. Later that day, Ángel rapes his neighbour Eva, who is also Diego's girlfriend, in a nearby alley. As she leaves him, she trips in the mud and gashes her cheek. At the sight of her blood, Ángel faints.

The next day, Ángel's strict mother insists that he go to church as a condition of living in her home. After mass, she insists that he go to confession. He instead goes to the police station to confess to the rape. When Eva is brought to the station, she says he ejaculated before penetrating her and declines to press charges. Alone with the police detective, Ángel notices photos of dead men with the same wound administered by the woman seen during his earlier spell of vertigo. He confesses to having killed them. The detective then asks about two missing women, who were also students of Diego, and Ángel confesses to killing them as well.

Although Ángel manages to lead the police to the two women's bodies buried outside Diego's home, the detective is not convinced. He questions how Ángel could have buried them there without Diego's knowledge, finds that Ángel has an alibi for the murder of one of the men, and discovers that he faints at the sight of blood. Meanwhile, Ángel's lawyer, María Cardenal—the woman from Ángel's dream—suspects that Diego killed the two women. She takes him to a remote house where she has collected memorabilia related to Diego since she first saw him kill a bull. At Diego's home, Eva overhears the two and realises that they are the killers. When María leaves, Eva tells Diego he has to take her back since she knows everything. Eva then goes to María to tell her to stay away from Diego, since Eva knows her secrets. María scoffs at Eva's threats, and Eva goes to the police.

While Eva is telling the detective what she has heard, Ángel's psychiatrist calls the detective to tell him that Ángel has seen Diego and María in a vertigo trance, and that they are in danger. Ángel guides them to María's house. Just as the police, Ángel, Eva, and the psychiatrist arrive, an eclipse begins and they hear a gunshot. María has stabbed Diego between the shoulder blades and shot herself in the mouth as they were having sex. Viewing the scene, Ángel laments that he could not save Diego, while the detective says that it is better this way and that he has never seen anyone happier.

Cast

Production

Pedro Almodóvar said the opening sex scene between Assumpta Serna and Jesús Ruyman was unsimulated.[2]

When he was filming the final scene with Serna, Almodóvar was not sure whether Nacho Martínez, playing the wounded matador who was about to have sex with her, should graze her crotch directly with his mouth or do so with a rosebud between his teeth. Almodóvar tried it out himself. "I realized it was better to put some distance between the actor's tongue and the girl's sex", he said, during an appearance on a Spanish talk show. "I do it all", he added.[3]

Reception

Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote, "The movie looks terrific and is acted with absolute, straight-faced conviction by the excellent cast headed by Miss Serna, Mr. Martinez and Mr. Banderas. Matador is of most interest as another work in the career of a film maker who, possibly, is in the process of refining a singular talent."[4]

In his 2006 book Almodóvar on Almodóvar, the director admitted that he considered this film and Kika (1993) to be his two weakest.

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, Matador holds an approval rating of 92% based on 26 reviews, with an average rating of 7.3/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Intertwining murder and seduction, Pedro Almodóvar's Matador is a provocative thriller that will shock even the most adventurous moviegoers."[5]

References

  1. "Matador".
  2. Marco Melani. Il viandante ebbro, p. 112, p. 112, at Google Books
  3. "The evolution of Pedro Almodovar". The New Yorker. 28 November 2016. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  4. Almodovar's 'Matador,' Surrealist Sex Comedy, Vincent Canby, The New York Times, 16 September 1988, p. 2. (The NYT review avoids Spanish language accents consistently throughout.) Retrieved 2012-03-21.
  5. "Matador". Rotten Tomatoes.
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