Antonio Mayans plays Mendoza, the patriarch of his small
family and an Argentinean actor living in exile on a remote island off of the
coast of Spain. The Mendoza family are
the sole occupants of said isle whose other members are Desdemona (Lina Romay
in her Candy Coster guise), Mendoza’s eighteen-year-old daughter, Dulcinea
(Carmen Carrión), Mendoza’s lover, and Poulova (Susana Kerr), the youngest
daughter, who is also simple-minded.
Their family dynamic has reached critical mass: Mendoza has become disassociated—he is
desperately trying to remember his past and revel in his former glory; but his
past is a distant memory: for all he
knows, Mendoza is creating memories rather than re-living them. Desdemona really, really wants to fuck. In an early scene of La Casa, scantily-clad
Desdemona lays upon her bed in full view of her father, attempting sensual
poses every time that he looks up from his magazine. Dulcinea has become bored with this isolated
and repetitious lifestyle, especially since Mendoza refuses or physically
cannot make love to her anymore. Poor
Poulova is nothing more than a small child in a grown woman’s body. As she requires the same care as a newborn
infant, the remaining family members bicker over who is to care for her, as
none seem particular eager to do so. One
day a handsome young hunter (Tony Skios) arrives on the island for a little
poaching and becomes the catalyst causing the Mendoza family to implode.
The sole criticism of La
Casa de las Mujeres Perdidas in the essential Obsession: The Films of Jess Franco is a quote from Franco:
“La Casa de las
Mujeres Perdidas is not a horror film, but it’s a very bizarre film, a
story of manners—bad manners! It looks
like Buñuel’s The Discreet Charm of the
Bourgeoisie, yet it’s totally different.
It mostly concerns la petite
bourgeoisie” (J. Franco, Madrid, 1986).
(*)
Buñuel, Pasolini, and Jean Renoir, for example, all had fun
at the expense of the boo-gee—exposing
their values and then creating the characters’ downfall, because of them. There is no reason that Jess Franco is not
entitled to their same artistic license.
La Casa de las Mujeres Perdidas
is really essential Franco: it is
poetic, sensuous, and provocative while also being playful, progressive, and
above all, very dirty. It is a film made
in post-Franco Spain, where Lina Romay spends almost the entire time
butt-naked, seemingly because she can.
In a representative sequence, Desdemona sits in a rocking chair and eats
an orange. She is also watching what I
assume to be an episode of Dallas (as
the dialogue reveals characters such as J.R. and Sue Ellen). Franco’s camera never leaves a tight
composition upon Romay. She begins
enjoying her orange, letting the juice drip upon her body, eventually playing
with a slice of orange in a very discreet area of her body. (She enjoys the same playfulness with a
cigarette in an earlier scene.) I cannot
help but to find this scene funny: the
privilege of masturbating to an episode of Dallas
is now available; or one can now masturbate while watching Romay masturbate to
an episode of Dallas. I think that I
have exceeded my quota with the word masturbate for now. Time to move on.
Franco exposes the characters’ self-centeredness and
self-importance in La Casa. Dulcinea is the recipient of an unfulfilled
promise: here she is on a supposed
idyllic island with a famous actor:
Mendoza is self-absorbed and impotent, and Dulcinea is little more than
a caretaker for the family, despite not being the mother of the two
daughters. She creates her own fun by
blackmailing Desdemona into fucking her in exchange for her silence to her
father about her chronic masturbating.
When she encounters the hunter in the living room late in the evening,
Dulcinea is not reticent to seduce him.
When she catches Mendoza spying on the couple, Dulcinea shames him for
his lack of virility. It is the crushing
blow for Mendoza—he realizes that his reality is a created one.
La Casa de las Mujeres
Perdidas has some beautiful photography from Juan Soler and the music by
Daniel J. White is quite enchanting. All
the performances are good. My favorite
scenes are of Romay waxing poetic by the seashore or looking above from the
veranda at the passing airplanes. Her
voice-over narration speaks of a desire for freedom and melancholy for each
passing day. These soliloquies are very
sensitive and well done by Franco. La Casa is a unique, disorienting film
well worth seeking out by fans of Franco.
* Ed. Lucas Balbo
& Peter Blumenstock. Graf Haufen and
Frank Trebbin Publishing. Germany. 1993: p. 153.
2 comments:
I've always considered this to be the middle film in a loose trilogy of sorts along with Hot Nights of Linda and Broken Dolls. All three deal with the implosion of an odd family unit living in isolation and an outsider infiltrating their self-created, insular world. This is certainly one of the best of the three. Strange, a bit funny at times and really rather sad, its a film that leaves a lasting impression. Being a Franco film, just what that impression is will probably be different depending on who you ask, but an impression is left nonetheless. This could really do with an official release like a lot of Franco's stuff from this period.
Thank you, Tom for the thoughtful comment. I appreciate it. I agree about this one getting a better treatment on home video, as I think it's worth preserving as one of Franco' better 80s films.
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