La mirada violeta (2004) Poster

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Doesn't engage the viewer.
joaquin53 May 2004
La Mirada Violeta (`The Violet Look') is the first film produced by Violeta Films set up by the actress/journalist Cayetana Guillén Cuervo, also stars in this film. Cayetana Guillén Cuervo is a respected actress and a familiar face on Spanish TV. She is host of `Versión Española', a series is dedicated to presenting contemporary Spanish movies (the movie is shown, followed by a roundtable discussion with the director, actors, or screenwriters, etc).

In this movie, she plays the compulsively promiscuous Violeta, for whom the grass is always greener on the other bed. Over the course of the movie, she beds three men, a relation with a fourth is revealed, a relationship with a fifth hinted at, and at the end of the movie she is on her way presumably to the house and bed of a sixth man who she just met on the street.

Violeta has a cat named Liz (named after the much-married Elizabeth Taylor) who is constantly in heat. Liz the cat is bound by its animal instincts. Violeta, on the other hand, seems to be bound by her own animal instinct. Her roving eyes focus on her lovers' napes. Over the course of the movie, there is talk of spaying Liz. Does Violeta herself need to be spayed?

Cayetana Guillén Cuervo's Violeta isn't a happy woman, at least she doesn't remain happy for long. It seems that she is trying to come to terms with herself and to understand her behavior. Her only friends are Berta, the wife of one of her earlier lovers (played marvelously by Isabel Ordaz) and Sergio, the gay brother of her current lover. There are a few funny moments in the movie, but I would hesitate to call this a comedy.

The problem is Violeta doesn't arouse our emotions. She is not a sympathetic character even though we see her rejecting the very love and stability she needs. She is also not a monster who loves and leaves. Near the end, a character makes a reference to `Breakfast at Tiffany's', and suddenly there's Henry Mancini's `Moon River' in the background, and there is the requisite farewell scene under the rain. Trouble is, Violeta is no Holly Golightly and Cayetana Guillén Cuervo is no Audrey Hepburn. La Mirada Violeta doesn't quite work.
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1/10
Violets are blue
jotix1008 February 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Violeta, the woman at the center of this story, is a woman that does not know what she wants. When we first meet her she is living with Ari, a writer of poetry. Their sexual life appears to be good, but Violeta, evidently, is restless to be in a situation for the long haul. When her cat begins having problems, she takes it to a vet, a handsome young man, who catches her eye. One thing leads to another and before we know, Violeta is involved in a hot love affair with Ivan, the animal guy.

Things do not quite work out the way Violeta had planned. No sooner does she move in with Ivan, she has second thoughts about her decision. To complicate matters, there is a former lover who obviously still feels for her. The only problem is Violet can pick and choose from all these men, but she decides to try a new man after thinking that life with Ariel will not work.

This film is a mess, to say the least. Supposedly, this is a vanity project since the original idea came from Cayetana Guillen Cuervo, in collaboration with Daniela Fejerman, who has contributed to other films. As directed by Nacho Perez De La Paz, and Jesus Ruiz, it seems to fall in the category of "too many cooks spoiled the gazpacho". There is not an ounce of originality in a film with an ending ripped off from "Breakfast at Tiffany's", which next to this looks like a masterpiece.

Nothing in the picture makes the audience become involved in what is happening. To compensate, Ms. Guillen Cuervo does not hesitate in baring it all for the viewer's benefit. The dialog is fake, as are most of the situation presented. The viewer never believes in what these stereotypes have to say.

Watch it at your own risk.
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