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Three generations of women survive easterly wind,
fire, madness, superstition and even death through goodness,
lies and an unlimited vitality.
They are: Raimunda (Penélope Cruz), married to an unemployed
worker, and her teenager daughter (Yohana Cobo). Sole (Lola
Dueñas), her sister, who earns her living as hairdresser.
And their mother (Carmen Maura), dead in a burning, with her
husband. This character comes as an apparition first to her
sister (Chus Lampreave) and then to Sole, even though the ones
she had unsettled affairs with were Raimunda and her village
neighbour, Agustina (Blanca Portillo). ‘Volver’
is not a surreal comedy, though it might seem so at times. The
living and the dead live together without problems, but provoking
hilarious situations and others full of deep and genuine emotion.
It is a movie about the culture of death in my native region,
La Mancha. My folks there live it in astonishing simplicity.
The way in which the dead are still present in their lifes,
the richness and humanity of their rites makes it possible for
the dead to never really die.
‘Volver’ shatters all clichés of a dark Spain
and shows a Spain that is as real as it is opposed. A white
Spain, spontaneous, fun, fearless, fair and with solidarity. |
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