Vicki
Christina Barcelona
Starring:
Javier Bardem, Scarlett Johansson, Penelope Cruz
Directed by: Woody Allen (“Match Point”)
Written by: Woody Allen (“Scoop”)
By Kiko
Martinez
Calling
a Woody Allen film the best film of this summer
(excluding animated trash-compacting robots, of course)
might rub some comic book fans the wrong way, but with
“Vicky Christina Barcelona,” the New York City-born
auteur has returned to form and does it out of his
East-Coast element.
The setting
might not be in Manhattan like many of Allen’s films,
but in Spain, the three-time Oscar winner has found a
fanciful way to display his unique take on the
difference between passion and love in both
relationships and fine art.
In the film,
Oscar winner Javier Bardem (“No Country for Old Men”)
plays Juan Antonio, a Spanish painter who makes an
indecent proposal to two American tourists vacationing
Barcelona for the summer. When Juan Antonio audaciously
walks up to Vicky (Rebecca Hall) and Cristina (Scarlett
Johansson) and asks them to spend a weekend with him,
the duo is bemused by his debonair style and disregard
for possible rejection.
Vicky is
engaged to be married and has no interest in Juan
Antonio but joins him anyway, while Cristina, who had
noticed the smooth talker earlier at an art gallery, is
easily persuaded to take up the offer. Although it is a
lovely weekend for the trio, the scheduled sexual
escapades are altered when Cristina becomes ill and
Vicky is left to fend off Juan Antonio’s charm.
The
complexities of these characters are revealed even more
when Allen pulls an ace from his sleeve in the second
half of the film when he introduces us to Juan Antonio’s
ex-wife Maria Elena (Penelope Cruz), who’s fierce
attitude and semi-psychotic behavior has been the
downfall between her and her heart's conquistador.
It’s Cruz’s
intense performance that is the show-stopper in
"Barcelona." In her best role since earning an Oscar
nomination for Pedro Almodovar’s 2006 film “Volver,”
Cruz owns the screen as a woman scorned, not only by a
love lost but also by life itself. When her and Bardem
share scenes, the raw emotion and brutally honesty of
the film climaxes. Whether the ex-lovers are fighting in
the streets of Barcelona or when Juan Antonio is
pleading with Maria Elena to speak English when she is
talking in front of Cristina, Allen's definitely got a
handle on searing verbal conflict.
Cruz
deserves another Oscar nomination this year in the Best
Supporting category. Along with her performance,
director Allen’s trek across the Atlantic is inspiring
despite missing the boat on his last two voyages with
“Cassandra’s Dream” and “Scoop.” But in “Vicky Christina
Barcelona,” Allen writes a foursome of characters that
epitomize what the word “desire” means. It truly is a
sexually-engaging (and not just because of the buzzed
ménage a trois scene between Bardem, Cruz, and
Johansson) and fascinating cinematic travelogue of
neurotic narrative. Grade: A-