Frida

— Big-canvas biopic: a film full of colours that's let down by a watery script.”

Salma Hayek and Alfred Molina as Frida Kahlo and husband Diego Rivera
  • Director: Julie Taymor
  • United States, 2002
  • 5 stars out of 5

Frida is almost brilliant. For a start, it has to be one of the most beautifully shot films this decade, thanks in no small part to the prodigal cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto who adds these triumphant visuals to his impressive list (Babel, Brokeback Mountain, 21 Grams, Amores Perros). Elliot Goldenthal’s soundtrack, enhanced by onscreen contributions from Lila Downs and Chavela Vargas, is rich and memorable.

What’s remarkable about Frida Kahlo’s art is that it uniquely expresses her internal self, representing multiple emotions often with some extra element that quietly disturbs. This film has all of that visual impact but lacks the emotional bite, leaving the art itself to fill key dramatic moments. It’s a bold tactic that doesn’t quite come off.

Salma Hayek’s portrayal of the Mexican artist is solid but the script, by Taymor and Edward Norton, doesn’t really stretch her enough and the peppering of rather conspicuous gringo dialogue in her part leaves a bitter taste. After two hours of beautiful images, I was left wondering, but for the wrong reasons.

Comments

No responses yet to Frida

Why not give me your comments?

You can use these tags in your comment:

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

(required)

See also:

Lila Downs in concert

Lila Downs

An enormously gifted Mexican singer who puts everything she has into every performance.

  • Originally published: 25 Jul 2007 in Concerts

The Aviator

Di Caprio, Blanchett and Law in The Aviator

Like the 1920s lifestyle – expensive but frequently soulless.

  • Originally published: 19 Feb 2007 in Film

No Country For Old Men

Sweet as Chigurh: Javier Bardem in No Country For Old Men

The Coen Brothers are back on form with this grim, sharply written movie featuring an terrifyingly unfathomable Javier Bardem.

  • Originally published: 27 Jan 2008 in Film

The Good Shepherd

This dry history of a mystery man’s motivations hides its intelligence rather too well.

  • Originally published: 16 Oct 2007 in Film

Y Tu Mamá También

Driving them wild: Garcia, Luna and Verdu in Y Tu Mama Tambien

Your mother wouldn’t like it: the awkward charm of a Mexican coming-of-age drama.

  • Originally published: 4 Feb 2008 in Film

Who you gonna call?

Photo

Hello you, I'm Mike Padgett. I'm not a Princeton curator, Knoxville mayoral candidate, Kentuckian pastor or Arizona journalist, I just share the same name. In fact, I am a consultant working in user experience and information design.

I also enjoy travel, concerts, films and walking.

I'm originally from Yorkshire, England but nowadays I live in Belgium. My current favourite Belgian beer is Black Albert.

Shameless self-promotion

Dopeology.org

Over a year in the making, Dopeology.org is my latest personal project: a topology of doping in thirty years of European pro road cycling.

I collected information from thousands of sources, then I modelled and published it via a lightweight user interface.

RSS feeds