Login  |  Register 

All Forums



Casting Forum

Crewing Forum

Writing Forum

Film Forum

Music Forum

General Forum

Film Reviews

Feedback


Post Message

Chat

Maillists

Search Forum

Forum FAQ



Remove Adverts

Spanglish (12A) US 131 mins
Reviewed By:  Jason Korsner 
Date: 2005-03-11

WHO MADE IT?
|
Director: James L Brooks Cast: Adam Sandler, Tea Leoni, Paz Vega, Cloris Leachman, Shelbie Bruce, Sarah Steele
|
WHAT'S IT ABOUT?
|
Hispanic single-mother Flor (Vega) gets a job as maid to a wealthy LA chef John (Sandler) and his materialistically shallow wife Deborah (Leoni). No-one in the family speaks Spanish and she doesn’t speak a word of English.
When the family rents a beach house in Malibu, Flor is invited to join them, with her daughter, Cristina (Bruce).
Deborah prefers pretty Cristina to her own, overweight daughter, and treats her to private days out and gets her a scholarship.
Flor doesn’t like her daughter becoming more comfortable with the Clasky family than with her, so she decides to quit.
Marital infidelity and forbidden attraction only add to the emotional mix.
|
WHAT'S IT LIKE?
|
This is one of those peculiar films where well-observed familial relationships, a large number of tender moments and all-round impressive performances don’t seem to amount to a satisfying end product.
The film doesn’t seem sure of its subject: is it about a marriage under pressure, a Hispanic maid trying to make it in the English-speaking world or as its rather incongruous framing structure would suggest, an Hispanic teenager applying for a scholarship to Princeton?
And the whole film is predicated on the unlikely event that a wealthy family would hire a maid who didn’t speak the lingo in the first place.
But it challenges the viewer, providing you with a baddie who really has the best intentions and for a time, making you feel uncomfortable about rooting for the break-up of a marriage.
Ultimately, it leaves you with the same warm and uplifting feeling that Hollywood movies of this kind strive for.
|
SPANGLISH opens February 25th 2005

Rating:
More reviews

Terms, conditions, and acceptable use policy |  About UK Screen |  Help and FAQ |  Contact us

Copyright © 1999-2008 – UK Screen Ltd – All Rights Reserved