By James Bowman on 9.5.06 @ 12:02AM
A frequently interesting portrait of the friendship between two prostitutes in Madrid.
Though it is too heavily freighted with pathos and
sentimentality and a clunky and unnecessary political subtext,
Princesas, by Fernando Leon de Aranoa (Mondays in the
Sun), is a frequently interesting portrait of the friendship
between two prostitutes in Madrid. Caye (Candela Pena) is one of
several working girls who hang out at the beauty parlor run by
Gloria (Llum Barrera) and grumble as they look out on the adjacent
square where immigrant women are, as they see it, taking work away
from them by undercutting their prices. One of the women at
Gloria's notices one of the immigrant women swaying seductively
across the square and comments: "They learn to walk that way as
kids. They put something in their shoes."
Caye arrives ten minutes late for an appointment with a john
only to discover that one of the immigrants, a beautiful Dominican
named Zulema (Micaela Nevarez), has beaten her to him. She tells
off the interloper, but later realizes that she is her neighbor in
a nearby "warm bed" apartment -- that is, one that she rents only
during the day, sharing it with the night tenants, another
immigrant and his family. One day, when Caye hears the television
turned up too loud in Zulema's flat and finds the door ajar, she
goes in to find her beaten up by a man who has been sleeping with
her in return for promises of legalizing her status. Caye takes her
to the hospital, and the two become close friends.
The political lesson in having a would-be Spanish nativist like
Caye pal up with an immigrant is mostly understated and
unobtrusive. The only breach in their relationship comes when Caye
sends the spaced-out Blanca (Maria Ballesteros), also known as
"Miss Methadone," to warn Zulema of an impending bust because she's
afraid of revealing their friendship to the other girls at
Gloria's. But even this is soon overcome. Of much more interest to
Mr. Aranoa is getting the most he can out of the well-worn theme of
the pathos in the life of a prostitute. The pun on Caye's name -- a
homophone of the Spanish word for "street" -- is made much of in
order to remind us of her emblematic status as poster girl for the
heartbreak of whoredom.
Zulema has left her small son with her mother back in the
Dominican Republic and sends home all she can from her earnings in
Spain. At least, says Caye, she has something happy to look back on
with nostalgia. "I don't feel nostalgic," she says, since "nothing
worth missing has ever happened to me. How can you be nostalgic for
something that hasn't happened yet?" She hangs on to that "yet"
through most of the picture as a fragile life-line of hope. She
dreams of one day being picked up from work -- "That's what love
is," she imagines, never having experienced it before -- and for a
time she thinks her dream has come true with a shy computer
engineer called Manuel (Luis Callejo).
In fact, the dream does come true, but only because she dares
not hope for too much. "He could be the man of my life," she
confides in Zulema. "I would like to be the woman of his life, even
if just for one day." Their courtship consists of little more than
a single scene in which, wearing Zulema's "Sexy Girl 69" shirt,
Caye goes out to dinner with Manuel and tries to tell him how she
feels, which she only knows how to do in sexual terms. In the
middle of the meal, she has to leave the table to perform a sex act
on a former client who might otherwise reveal who she is. To Manuel
she has half-jokingly suggested that she has another, a secret
identity, like a superhero. When she comes back to the table, he
says to her: "I know everything. You didn't go to the bathroom" --
and a panicked look comes into her eyes. "You went to save the
world. You stopped a train from derailing. You saved everyone and
came back. Am I right?"
The idea of the superhero (or superheroine, as Caya insists) is
meant to be cognate with that of the "princesses" from which the
film takes its title and which she and Zulema like to imagine they
are. And in a way they are saving people too, Mr. Aranoa almost
wants to say, though they are hated and reviled for it instead of
being loved. It's one of several points at which he pushes the
pathos just too far and the film teeters on the brink of emotional
excess. Another is when Caye tells Zulema that "the worst thing
isn't if there's nothing after death; the worst would be if there
was another life like this one."
A more astringent touch is added by Caye's middle-class family
dinners with her mother, brother and sister-in-law, a school
principal, that punctuate the film and at which she looks much more
miserable than at anything that happens to her in her life as a
prostitute -- about which the family naturally knows nothing. Her
mother (Mariana Cordero) is a dour woman who, Caye believes, sends
flowers to herself in order to make people think she has an admirer
-- or else that her husband, who has long-since abandoned her, is
trying to apologize and make up. Caye insists that her father died
three years ago, but her mother refuses to believe it. On the one
occasion when Zulema joins her at the family table and Caye
explains that her mother prints the cards that come with the
flowers so no one will know that she has sent them to herself,
Zulema asks: "What do the cards say?"
Caye looks blank. No one has ever bothered to read them. The
hostility between them runs so deep that she can't recognize her
mother's loneliness as the mirror image of her own. The leitmotif
of the cell-phone ring-tone that Caye can't answer in her mother's
presence comes to stand for the isolation in which they stand with
respect to each other. All this is very persuasively sketched in
and helps make Mr. Aranoa's film a mostly enjoyable one that is,
like him, just a little too much in love with its own
superheroines.
topics:
Television, Law