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Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!

Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!

List Price: $29.98
Your Price: $23.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: She really played hard to get
Review: Tie Me Up, Tie Me Down is my favorite of the unusual but compelling Pedro Almodovar library. It's probably a terrible movie for stalkers to watch because it works out better than their best dreams. Then again most kidnappers lack the verve of Antonio Banderas. The object of his captivity is quite a girl and the consummation scene was well overdue. If you are anxious to see a kidnapping movie with a romantic ending, this is your picture.

After seeing this film it dawned on me why Almodovar's films have their own feel. I don't think I have seen a gum wrapper or faded paint in any of his films. Everyone seems to live in renovated apartments and work in offices with modern furniture. Both his cinematography and art direction are so crisp and clear that you can smell the wet paint and imagine the crew behind the camera wiping their hands in mineral spirits. I wince at the thought of his characters eating something, because it will get crumbs on the floor. Luckily the characters seem to think of this before me.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: She really played hard to get
Review: Tie Me Up, Tie Me Down is my favorite of the unusual but compelling Pedro Almodovar library. It's probably a terrible movie for stalkers to watch because it works out better than their best dreams. Then again most kidnappers lack the verve of Antonio Banderas. The object of his captivity is quite a girl and the consummation scene was well overdue. If you are anxious to see a kidnapping movie with a romantic ending, this is your picture.

After seeing this film it dawned on me why Almodovar's films have their own feel. I don't think I have seen a gum wrapper or faded paint in any of his films. Everyone seems to live in renovated apartments and work in offices with modern furniture. Both his cinematography and art direction are so crisp and clear that you can smell the wet paint and imagine the crew behind the camera wiping their hands in mineral spirits. I wince at the thought of his characters eating something, because it will get crumbs on the floor. Luckily the characters seem to think of this before me.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: BEST ROMANTIC MOVIE EVER ...if a little weird!
Review: Unfortunately, there are only five stars to rate this film, but it deserves ten! Both Victoria Abril and Antonio Banderas shine as lovers in the strangest of love stories only a genius like director Almodóvar can imagine!

If you sometimes feel "all alone in the world", if you've ever been kidnapped by love, or begged to be forever tied down to the person you're nuts about, this is your dream movie! It's tender, sexy, funny and outrageous! It's "The Collectionist" meets "Hello Kitty!"! It's a true MASTERPIECE about all what love is all about. I'm sure you don't want to miss it!

P.S.: Sure, it's got sex and nudity, but if you object those things... ...get a life!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: psychotic but good
Review: What suprised me the most in this movie was to see Antonio Banderas playing a villan. He plays a character who is mentally ill who kidnaps an actress and hold her hostage. The movie is pretty twisted but definetely a good one

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Subverting types!
Review: When originally writing this film, Pedro Almodovar asked himself the question "Can love be calculated or sketched the same way one could study for an exam?" This is certainly the conviction of the Antonio Banderas character who seeks to capture his former lover and eventually convince her of her love for him. Although one could initially interpret the theme of the film as overtly misogynist - man tries to physically force woman to love him - gender stereotypes are typically subverted in true Almodovarian fashion.

It would seem that the women are the figures of power in this film and both Ricky and wheelchair-bound film director Maximo are at a loss in trying to seduce the object of their desire in any conventional sense. They are both addicted to Marina, but the only thing she's ever been addicted to is heroin. By the end of the film the Antonio Banderas character is almost totally domesticated, making food, cleaning the appartment, making sure Marina has enough drugs etc.

There's also the reference to the Sacred Heart at the beginning of the film and masochism has often been perceived in some of the more archaic rituals of our Roman church.

None of these subtleties were apparantly noticed by the American classification board who initially wanted to give this film an 'X' rating because of playing with toys in the bath! (?)


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