Review from the April 22 Entertainment Weekly:
"Torremolinos 73 has the dubious distinction of being just about the mildest porno comedy ever made. It's like something the teenage Pedro Almodóvar might have written to shock his 10th-grade creative writing teacher. In Franco's Spain during the early '70s, Alfredo (Javier Camara), a failed encyclopedia salesman, is about to get downsized when he learns his company is undergoing a transition. It will now produce a series of "educational" super-8 sex films. Alfredo and his wife, the lovely, subdued Carmen (Candela Peña), are given a camera and offered the chance to perform in their own homemade skin flicks at 50,000 pesetas a pop. Amusing as it is to learn that this fuddy-duddy couple enjoys a robust sex life, in a strange way it neuters the movie. Shooting self-made erotica doesn't change them; it's just a job they take on so that they can afford to have a baby. What does change is that Alfredo decides he wants to be Ingmar Bergman—literally. He writes a script based on The Seventh Seal, which gets produced after Carmen becomes a popular porn star in Scandinavia. Torremolinos 73 is at once far-fetched and saccharine—not a great combination. They should have called it Cinema Pornadiso."
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3 comments:
I saw Torremolinos 73 when it was shown in Spain, a couple of years ago. I remember it was not a masterpiece, but I enjoyed the film. I did not considered it a 'mild porn' film. That was not the point. For me it was an interesting portrait of a bit of life in Spain during the last years of the Franco era.
Hi Jose--
Yeah, this review only mentions Franco's Spain in passing. is the title something to do with the year the film is set in?
Who in their right mind would want to see a film described as 'mild porn'?
Yes, I think the title refers to the year it's set in. That's two years before Franco snuffed it.
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