IMDb RATING
5.7/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
An exiled woman returns to her home in Argentina to visit her dying father and leads a double life, one of which involves strange sexual behavior.An exiled woman returns to her home in Argentina to visit her dying father and leads a double life, one of which involves strange sexual behavior.An exiled woman returns to her home in Argentina to visit her dying father and leads a double life, one of which involves strange sexual behavior.
- Awards
- 1 win & 2 nominations total
Gael García Bernal
- Gustavo
- (as Gael Garcia Bernal)
Héctor Alterio
- Padre
- (as Hector Alterio)
Luis Machín
- Eduardo
- (as Luis Machin)
Mónica Gonzaga
- Mujer Madura
- (as Monica Gonzaga)
Yasmín Elías
- Vicky
- (as Yasmin Elias)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
OOOOOk.
Here we go.
What do I like about this movie? Well, the photography was good. It seems It could have been in black and white to give more power to the images with the type of music Fito Paez selected to make. It was like try too hard and too much of it. That piano Psycho style. I don't know. Too strange. Unless you want to go on that direction. Then go on that direction with the movie too. May be it would have been a darker picture (with high contrast too) for a darker subject matter.
I like Cecilia and Gael. These characters are difficult to identify with unless you are going thru the same thing. I spoke with an friend from Argentina and said that Gael accent was petty good. Remember, Argentinians are picky, so I believed him.
The camera could have moved more and Fito could have play more with the close ups much better (Philadelhia movie style).You know, Jonathan Demme.
It's no doubt that music could have better to get you in tone with the movie.
This story is a little hard to believe. If this has happen before to someone, that person should tell this story.
Fito, it seems you have money. Please use it wisely in movies. There are more fascinating stories where I am sure you can make more money.
Latinamerican films need to make a change but in a uplifting way. And I don't mean happy endings. But stories that most people can identify with and enjoy more at the same time.
Also if I ever do any movie, this a good one to watch what not to do.
Over and Out. Until next time.
Thanks.
Here we go.
What do I like about this movie? Well, the photography was good. It seems It could have been in black and white to give more power to the images with the type of music Fito Paez selected to make. It was like try too hard and too much of it. That piano Psycho style. I don't know. Too strange. Unless you want to go on that direction. Then go on that direction with the movie too. May be it would have been a darker picture (with high contrast too) for a darker subject matter.
I like Cecilia and Gael. These characters are difficult to identify with unless you are going thru the same thing. I spoke with an friend from Argentina and said that Gael accent was petty good. Remember, Argentinians are picky, so I believed him.
The camera could have moved more and Fito could have play more with the close ups much better (Philadelhia movie style).You know, Jonathan Demme.
It's no doubt that music could have better to get you in tone with the movie.
This story is a little hard to believe. If this has happen before to someone, that person should tell this story.
Fito, it seems you have money. Please use it wisely in movies. There are more fascinating stories where I am sure you can make more money.
Latinamerican films need to make a change but in a uplifting way. And I don't mean happy endings. But stories that most people can identify with and enjoy more at the same time.
Also if I ever do any movie, this a good one to watch what not to do.
Over and Out. Until next time.
Thanks.
Okay, this might not be the best of all Latin American movies, and it certainly doesn't have the most plausible of all plots (much has been said about it already). But, let's be honest about this: I appreciate every opportunity to see the acting of Cecilia Roth and Gael Garcia Bernal, and here they are both brilliant. Gael, especially, as the boy-man who falls in love with the mysterious woman behind the wall, delivers a heartbreakingly vulnerable performance. To see him break down in the end when Carmen's secret is revealed, made me suffer with him. Cecilia, too, is pure gold, and her scenes together with Gael crackle with erotic tension. Carmen, who is unable to lead normal sexual relationships after the trauma of imprisonment and torture under the Argentinian dictatorship, needs other people to audibly perform sexual acts to get some satisfaction herself. She likes to listen to hired couples from an adjacent room but usually remains invisible herself. The first thing that strikes her about young Gustavo is his voice on an answer machine. Since the owner of said answer machine is a friend who runs a model agency and provides her with "performers", she chooses Gustavo to be her next visitor. First she listens to him having sex with a girl, then she wants him to come alone and read dirty novels to her. Their mutual interest grows and, eventually, the middleaged woman and the 22 year old man fall in love with each other. However, their happiness is doomed. Something they don't know about each other (or does Carmen know?) is bound to surface, and a tragedy of Greek dimensions unfolds when it does. I'm quite certain that, in the future, only hard core Gael and Cecilia fans will bother to check out this dimly lit curiosity. Count myself one of them. The DVD (Spanish with English subtitles) is not one to stumble across in your usual video store. All the more, I'm glad to own it now, and I'll certainly watch it again. To see (and hear!) Gael Garcia Bernal lie on a bed, reading erotic fiction to his invisible client, was worth the money alone
One word, WOW! This movie has been bumped up to my #1 favorite movie. I watch many international and spanish films. I enjoy them more than American films because they are so unpredictable and unexplainable like the movie "Pierdas Verdes." After all Spanish movies I am left breathless and wondersome. Nothing has ever been this extraordinary. This movie is very powerful and goes where no other movies dares to go. I was in awwh throughout this whole film. Scene after scene you are simply amazed. Vidas Privadas has an excellent storyline, the actors, like Cecilia Roth (All About My Mother), and Gael Garcia Bernal (Amores Perros), are brillant. You can't go wrong with this movie by Fito Paez a legendary Argentine musician.
I bought the film and couldn't wait to rip open the package and watch it. I love Bernal's acting (he comes by it naturally from his family). But the plot and dialog reminded me of some of the French films of the same genre from the '60s. I kept expecting Deneuve or Tritignant to come through the door. I couldn't watch it through to the end. I admit that I was tired and had just watched, Dot the I (much superior), so maybe I'll give another go, even if only to watch Bernal who never disappoints. This was a forced film in my opinion with a dreadful script, but maybe I should give a second chance. That sounds perhaps a bit pretentious:-) Hugh Corston Quebec City
I agree with the previous review that this is very painful to watch. As a loyal Almodovar fan, I went to see this film because Cecilia Roth was in it as well as Gael Garcia Bernal who I'd seen in a couple of other films.
It was during the Miami Film Festival and Fito Paez happened to be in the audience that night. There was a huge Argentinian fan base watching that night.
What a horrible movie. My husband and I wanted to get up and leave but when we started looking around, the loyal fans gave us dirty looks and I did not want to be rude and interrupt anyone's viewing (the rows were very long and we were sitting right in the middle of our row).
This guy's idea of suspense music is a single high pitched piano note every 5 minutes (extremely annoying and it just didn't work). The story makes no sense and his attempt at creating a twist left you going "huh?".
Do not waste your time. If you want to see Cecilia Roth, get an Almodovar film and if you want to see Gael, get any other film he's been in.
PS: As soon as the movie ended, we left the theatre very very quickly.
It was during the Miami Film Festival and Fito Paez happened to be in the audience that night. There was a huge Argentinian fan base watching that night.
What a horrible movie. My husband and I wanted to get up and leave but when we started looking around, the loyal fans gave us dirty looks and I did not want to be rude and interrupt anyone's viewing (the rows were very long and we were sitting right in the middle of our row).
This guy's idea of suspense music is a single high pitched piano note every 5 minutes (extremely annoying and it just didn't work). The story makes no sense and his attempt at creating a twist left you going "huh?".
Do not waste your time. If you want to see Cecilia Roth, get an Almodovar film and if you want to see Gael, get any other film he's been in.
PS: As soon as the movie ended, we left the theatre very very quickly.
Did you know
- GoofsWhen Carmen accidentally burns herself on the thick green candle in the restaurant, the candle itself is completely missing from the next shot of the table. It then reappears, lying on its side, in the long shot through the window from Ana's point of view.
- How long is Privates Lives?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $305,991
- Runtime
- 1h 37m(97 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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