What Have I Done to Deserve This? Comments

  • Elouise 2023-03-07 01:00:48

    He is a director who really knows how to use movies to "see" families instead of filming them, and by the way, he pointed out this perspective to us, but who can learn...

  • Thaddeus 2023-02-04 10:10:07

    2009/01/06 2009/01/12 @ DVD

  • Kaylah 2023-01-30 09:39:17

    Weirdly, things did not develop as the audience expected, like boiling water, thinking it was about to boil, and suddenly in a strange way, the temperature dropped. At the end of the whole process of killing her husband, as a result, the police's investigation and the family's reaction were also filled with a faint...

  • Jose 2023-01-09 22:03:23

    Everyone in the small space is alive with glitches. After her husband died, Gloria bought a new wallpaper, but I didn't expect it to be a darker and messier pattern. The whole room was small and the walls were thin. The grandson combed his hair, and the two were close together, huddled in front of the sink. But outside, there are also gray buildings standing coldly, and the constant traffic flow. It's sad to look at, with nowhere to...

  • Michael 2023-01-09 08:02:34

    Spanish is really too dramatic, or I don't understand postmodern...

  • Brett 2023-01-07 05:43:06

    Realism and black humor are a mixture of female films. Almodovar’s misogyny is manifested in the unreasonable suppression of women by patriarchy. After women finally get rid of men, they fall into the myth of existence. The return of the younger son is more like It is the rebalancing of new men to women and the whole family. Almodovar’s women’s films are full of struggle and depression, but in the end they will usher in bright...

  • Preston 2022-12-31 19:28:09

    Remarkable woman. She survives anyway, so do they. 20200418 Rewatch. The whole movie is haunted by the specter of Franco and the Nazis (the macho husband can't forget his youthful years working in Germany and his boss/lover – a wealthy woman/ex-Nazi who once had Hitler's favor), and they both In the end, they all die, and the heroine can be rescued. Almodovar claims that his films are only about the present, but always question history (most of his film stories are ghosts of real-life...

  • Brett 2022-12-22 02:48:58

    The prequel of "Return", from the previous appreciation to the current nausea, it turns out that likes are not constant, or that my likes have been changing with the changes of tastes. For Almodovar, I still like his early...

  • Joanny 2022-12-12 08:31:28

    Almodóvar’s early films were more accustomed to showing female psychology through the flow of life, and later focused on a continuous event. (Cleaners' Martial Arts...

  • Branson 2022-12-11 16:42:23

    The overwhelmed middle-aged woman, the selfish husband who had an affair, the eldest son of drug dealers, the youngest son of a prostitute, and the stingy mother-in-law, the whole family was crushed on him, and finally killed her husband by mistake that day, and desperately wanted to commit suicide. , The youngest son who went home showed him hope, this ending may be the...

Extended Reading
  • Corene 2022-06-08 22:16:35

    The color and suffering of life

    The ubiquitous Almodovar red, the green walls, the light and shadow like oil paintings and the pink like cheap bubbles from the neighbor’s Crystal, can’t conceal the suffering and precious humanity of life. I personally feel that the colors of this film are harmonious. It's better than the Law of...

  • Curtis 2022-06-08 18:16:54

    The corner of fate, the beginning without suspense

    Old film of Almodovar, always in style. The overall frame is still his consistent mode of thinking-I attribute it to Spanish chaos and order, where things happen astonishing and there are reasons for them. (But most of the time we think it's messy just because it's Spanish...orz)

    Housewives,...

What Have I Done to Deserve This? quotes

  • Miguel: [back home after being given in adoption to a pedophiliac dentist] At first it was fun, but I am too young to be tied down.

  • Lucas Villalba: Letters from Hitler?

    Antonio: Yeah, she was a bit of a Nazi. I'm going to tell you a secret. I wrote them.

    Lucas Villalba: What?

    Antonio: I copy handwriting, but I'm not a forger. I did it for her, for Ingrid Muller.

    Lucas Villalba: The one who was mad about you.

    Antonio: Not that I like it, but she asked me to, and women, when thy want something...

    Lucas Villalba: Didn't anyone find you out?

    Antonio: Of course not. Not even Hitler, may he rest in peace, would have known.