Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueJoao sells video tapes in road bars between Portugal and Spain. One day he finds a middle aged woman in the middle of nowhere. Somebody is looking for her and she has to escape to Lisboa. Bu... Tout lireJoao sells video tapes in road bars between Portugal and Spain. One day he finds a middle aged woman in the middle of nowhere. Somebody is looking for her and she has to escape to Lisboa. But what is the secret of this woman? Why does she want to go to Lisboa?Joao sells video tapes in road bars between Portugal and Spain. One day he finds a middle aged woman in the middle of nowhere. Somebody is looking for her and she has to escape to Lisboa. But what is the secret of this woman? Why does she want to go to Lisboa?
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 3 nominations au total
Avis en vedette
It's true that Joao is a road salesman of porn cassettes, but it doesn't follow in the least, given his disposition and innate principles, that he would sexually assault a distressed woman stranger in a bathroom. Nothing prior and nothing after would suggest even such a fleeting intent. In fact, the porn he pushes on his long tiresome sales routes might just as well be vacuum cleaners; for he's been longtime weary of not only his job, but his family, and his nationality. But his sex ad fulfilled, he and his unlikely prey, Berta, can now focus on her profound, and deeply disturbing plight. As her frightening nightmare gradually unfolds, he begins to act on and commit to what he learns, and to Berta herself, who knows too much of her family's investments in shady business and murder, and is on the run. A mutual respect and shared passion ensue only interrupted by another ad insert, this time in the form of Berte's exhibitionist daughter who warrants no more than a glance from Joao.
But Berta too must concede to the box office. In a rare moment of calm after a high intensity chase scene, she manages to offer Joao what he tried to take by force earlier: a free quickie--one that only a gymnast could perform. Could she be acting from madness induced by the excruciating stress she's under? If so, its form is way too convenient. And within seconds, Joao and Berta are back on the road, their lives in the balance, as the dangers, hazards, and betrayals of their exhausting ordeal mount. But Berta's has still not escaped her ulterior use; for her insolent and despotic husband drags her far aside and subjects her to a battering body search, as her daughter, who is set up as her competitor for sex and attention over Arturo in a female cat fight, is ordered to abandon her targeted mother. What it comes down to is that Berta is present to deliver both the good plot and its sensational tack-ons.
But that's not all Berta absorbs because "Lisboa's" disturbing ending also claims--or exploits her as this story's prime victim. True, the conclusion is no commercial break, but it's devious enough to undermine Berta's faith and courage, to deprive her of her own just conclusion, and Joao's championing of her. It also implies that a woman who doesn't know her place, who steps out of line, and refuses to collaborate, must serves as a sacrificial lamb. Does Joao sell her out? Well, he's never evasive, but he does fail to pull the trigger... But no, it's the movie's ending that's the explicit sell out.
"Lisboa" is billed as a thriller. However, it's not pacey but suspenseful. Along the way it's a character study, as we find out about a sinister marriage. The characters, in common with the general feel of the film, are minimal. One man, one woman.
As I said, I think the ending is superb and memorable, and something a bit different from the usual Hollywood fare.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesToutes les informations contiennent des divulgâcheurs
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Durée1 heure 40 minutes
- Couleur