Unable to get intimate with her husband of 10 years, a woman embarks on a steamy affair with his brother.Unable to get intimate with her husband of 10 years, a woman embarks on a steamy affair with his brother.Unable to get intimate with her husband of 10 years, a woman embarks on a steamy affair with his brother.
- Recepcionista hotel
- (as Juan José González Reyes)
- Locutor noticias
- (voice)
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaHindi Dubbed version named as Spanish Beauty
- GoofsThe baby's name was "Juan Ignacio" according the mail to Gonzalo, "we named him after dad" Ignacio writes in the mail, but when Cristina see the baby, she calls him "Jose Ignacio".
- Quotes
Gonzalo: If you're pregnant then the tests you took before are shit. If thats the case you have two options. You either tell Ignacio he's the father or you abort.
Zoe: Abort? That's your advice to me?
Gonzalo: Or you tell Ignacio he's the father you have two options!
Zoe: [pause] It doesn't matter to you if it's your child, does it?
Gonzalo: My child? How the fuck am I going to know if that's my child? You lied to me! You said you couldn't have children and now you fucking want to have my kid? That's just fucked!
[pause]
Gonzalo: I don't want you to call me, look for me, or even know me. Leaving this room I don't exist to you anymore you understand?
Peruvian director Ricardo de Montreuil has transposed the characters created by his compatriot, novelist Jaime Bayly, from Lima to Mexico City and has cast Mexican stars in three of the film's four principal roles. The idea behind the relocation was to broaden the film's global appeal, as Mexican films tend to be well received across Latin America and within the United States. Accents and local slang are duly adjusted, but the shift feels academic. "La Mujer de Mi Hermano" blooms inside only the most insular, intimate spaces, its characters untouched by the world around them. If anything, it's a reminder that class especially the upper echelons is a country unto itself that doesn't recognize geographical borders.
Disturbingly beautiful and melancholic Zoë (Barbara Mori) lives with her image-obsessed husband, Ignacio (Christian Meier), in an ultra-modern house half display case, half hothouse on the outskirts of the city. Ignacio is wealthy and doting but distant, and their marriage is affectionate but passionless. Ignacio's sterility and Zoë's refusal to consider adoption compound the feeling that the marriage has cruised into a cul-de-sac.
Zoë's complaints, which she shares with her gay friend Boris (Bruno Bichir), are legitimate, but it's Ignacio who elicits sympathy at first. Genuinely afraid of losing Zoë, he exudes a tightly wound, reined-in helplessness that's painful to watch. The feeling is cemented when Zoë starts hanging around with Ignacio's estranged younger brother, Gonzalo (Manolo Cardona), a painter who bad-mouths Ignacio at every opportunity but gladly takes his money each month. When Zoë drops by his gallery unexpectedly, Gonzalo sells her a painting from his show. The selling, rather than giving, becomes another point of contention between Gonzalo and Ignacio, but for Zoë it's a chance to get back at her husband.
The principal pleasures of the film lie in the subtle shifts in character that prompt shifts in allegiance, so I won't spoil them. The main thing is that "La Mujer de Mi Hermano" lets its characters' behaviors speak for themselves, which naturally lead the audience into snap judgments that evolve into something more fluid and forgiving.
Tall and broad, Meier has a rigid, hulking quality that serves him well as the high-strung businessman scared stiff of losing his wife. For a guy built like a pylon, he has a remarkable way of making himself small by tucking himself into a neat package.
Mori, a memorable presence, plays an instantly recognizable type nonetheless rarely seen on screen. Zoë's uncommon beauty masks her neediness, insecurity and loneliness. Mexican star Angélica Aragón plays Cristina, the mother of Ignacio and Gonzalo, a woman who sees strictly what she wants to see and nothing more.
A final twist a bit of a corker threatens to push what has otherwise been a cool-headed emotional experience into the realm of melodrama. Despite this false note, "La Mujer de Mi Hermano" keeps a cool eye trained on its characters as they struggle to make their lives conform to some strict phantom ideal.
For a movie about an inter-family dalliance, it's far more pragmatic than you might expect, and far more humane. Ultimately, "La Mujer de Mi Hermano" offers the uncommon (in movieland) perspective that it may be the ideal that oppresses life, not the other way around.
- deMontreuilr
- Apr 16, 2006
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Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $2,808,241
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $1,018,750
- Apr 16, 2006
- Gross worldwide
- $8,495,296
- Runtime1 hour 29 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1