Masterful Movie
... View MoreA story that's too fascinating to pass by...
... View MoreMostly, the movie is committed to the value of a good time.
... View MoreThrough painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
... View MoreThe teenager artist Ana (Manuela Vellés) is raised in Ibiza by her German father Klaus (Matthias Habich) in a naturalist lifestyle in a cave. One day, she meets a woman called Justine (Charlotte Rampling) that invites Ana to move to Madrid, offering education and economical support, to live in an old house with other artists having classes of Arts and with the only commitment of studying. Ana befriends her mate Linda (Bebe) and falls in love for the problematic Said (Nicolas Cazalé), having her first sexual experience with him. After a period together, Said leaves Ana, and then she is hypnotized by Anglo (Asier Newman), discovering her past lives and deaths.The first work of Julio Meden that I watched was the wonderful "Los Amantes del Círculo Polar" on 29 December 2000. Then, on 10 June 2005, I saw the extremely erotic, weird and confusing but also intriguing "Lucía y el Sexo" that I actually liked. I was looking forward waiting to see another work of this cult director, and I have just watched "Caótica Ana". I found a surrealistic original story, supported by a gorgeous and sexy actress with a lovely smile that exposes her naked body very easily and for free along the feature, and a wonderful cinematography, with beautiful landscapes and scenarios. Unfortunately the screenplay is a boring and chaotic mess, and the conclusion is awful. In the end, "Caótica Ana" is a disappointing movie from a director that I had great expectations. My vote is three.Title (Brazil): "Caótica Ana" ("Chaotic Ana")
... View MoreVisually, the movie is beautiful. Wonderful landscapes and light throughout, as always with Medem.In terms of the story, it's not very clear, a bit too mental to make sense. I enjoyed it until she got to New York and Said just re-appears like that, and what is that about the Irak war?? Suddenly, the story turned a bit too 'real' to make sense.Good acting all round, though some characters are undeveloped: Charlotte Rampling's, the cute hypnotist etc...Some strikingly beautiful moments though - Ana's recollection of dying in the desert (quite violent though), the animations, Ana dancing with her father etc...
... View MoreI have been lucky to see Julio Medem's films at several film festivals over the years and he always manages to captivate his audience. I was fortunate enough to attend the UK premiere of his new masterpiece Caotica Ana at the London Film Fstival recently. He is arguably one of Spain's all time most important film makers, for example Stanley Kubrick said that Medem's "The Red Squirrel" was one of his all time favourite films and Steven Spielberg offered Medem the chance to direct "Zorro", which he later turned down to spend more time developing his own movies.Caotica Ana is one of Medem's best films to date, beautifully filmed, beautifully acted and with an intensely captivating story of reincarnation and never ending love. Manuela Velles as Ana is enchanting and lights up the screen, Charlotte Rampling turns in a good performance in her first ever Spanish speaking role, Bebe provides much laughter and Asier Newman is simply hypnotic, exuding vulnerability and charisma. Sequences are at times "Chaotic" as per the title but are necessary to build emotional attachment to the story. The change between chaos and calm being personified in many ways through Ana's final journey to New York by boat, travelling on stormy and more tranquil waters. Overall a must see movie, very different to anything you have ever seen before and a real homage to the importance of women in society throughout the ages.
... View MoreThis is really something. Any Medem film is a true event. Being able to watch such a master evolve, film by film is a privilege. Medem is on the top of cinematic innovation and exploration today, at this moment, and this film may be his highest achievement so far.So this one is built with oppositions, scale oppositions, characters temperament oppositions, landscape oppositions. Ana is, herself, "chaotic", she holds inside the quietness of anonymous lives, and the burden of women's heritage. The first scene, with the birds, apparently so detached from the rest, Ana and the dirty senator, Ana and Linda, her friend.(NARRATIVE CONSTRUCTION) Medem's films have been always a reinvention of the love story, at once concerned about tenderness, human mind and visual cinematic storytelling innovation. The human soul is a huge iceberg from which we only see a short tip, and Medem's cinema always cared about the vast mass we don't see. This still matters here. But adding to that, there's a whole new dimension. This is a mark in Medem's career, and i would say in cinema, since he depicts new "scales" and new ambit to his cinema. He globalizes, and puts context into his once only dreamy, beautiful and tender world, that of "Lucia y el sexo" and "Los amantes..." One can't stop thinking about what this one shares with Babel, this is Medem's version of a contemporary global world.And he is so deep here. He freely works with time and space, in several dimensions. Let's check: . He works global space in being able to bring coherence to multiple stories, excerpts of lives, that pass all through Ana's mind (and Said, but Woman is the theme here). By global space i mean the world, let's call it realities, different countries and cultures no matter when we place it;. He works linear time, the one that carries Ana from the beginning to the end of her physical journey (also made by global spacial exploration). Here is Medem as we had seen him before in "Lucia...", dream like editions, always putting the audience looking for what happened;. The genius stroke: Medem adds historical time, working at once with various epochs, various "times", various contexts. Medem's own woman centered mythology finds in Ana the gate, or the passing point of every memory. This is the word, Medem brings memory to life.(CINEMATIC CONCERNS) All this would be just intellectually ambitious, but it is all put together in such a cinematic way that i do believe this film will prevail as a mark to a new approach. This is fresh and unseen before:. the cinematic devices: the edition, in the almost psychedelic moments in which all women from all times suffer at once, check the careful photography, always adequate to the situation but always coherent with the global work (duality once more). . the presence of "cinema" as a "mood" that en-forms all actions in the character (and mostly in the Camera) of Linda: she always films, Ana always watch the films (as well as a crowd), and many times those films (as well as some scenes) come worked out as the installations/performances of the students from the art school. And there's a particular moment in which this becomes clear as water and which is when we watch the heads of an audiences in a room wathching one of those films (this scene will only work in a theater, preferably with other people sitting in front of you). This will lead you to another dimension that may already not be cinema, but performative art, in which you are participating. Genius. . the unexpected use of animation, which intelligently starts "flat" and than becomes "deep", multidimensional, just like the whole construction as soon as Medem introduces his use of historical time.(THEMES) Ultimately, this is about paying attention to fundamental (though many times forgotten) issues: we came from somewhere, and that en-forms who we are today, forgetting that is rejecting Culture, capital C. Medem cares."This column is doric, I am Greek", says Ana after being hit by a corrupt politician with a small doric columnMy evaluation: 5/5, this is a cinematic essay, on my list of most important.http://www.7eyes.wordpress.com
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