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Bad Education (Original Uncut NC-17 Edition)
 
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Bad Education (Original Uncut NC-17 Edition) (2004)

Starring: Francisco Boira, Javier Cámara Rating: R (Restricted) Format: DVD
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (74 customer reviews)

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Bad Education (Original Uncut NC-17 Edition)
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Bad Education (Original Uncut NC-17 Edition) 4.3 out of 5 stars (74)
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Product Details

  • Actors: Francisco Boira, Javier Cámara, Juan Fernández (XIII), Alberto Ferreiro, Gael García Bernal
  • Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Language: Spanish (Dolby Digital 5.1)
  • Subtitles: English
  • Region: Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
    PLEASE NOTE:
    Some Region 1 DVDs may contain Regional Coding Enhancement (RCE). Some, but not all, of our international customers have had problems playing these enhanced discs on what are called "region-free" DVD players. For more information on RCE, click here.
  • Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Studio: Sony Pictures
  • DVD Release Date: April 12, 2005
  • Run Time: 106 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (74 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0007OCG5G
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #11,720 in Movies & TV (See Bestsellers in Movies & TV)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #5 in  Movies & TV > Art House & International > By Director > Almodóvar, Pedro
    #36 in  Movies & TV > Mystery & Suspense > Film Noir
    #36 in  Movies & TV > Art House & International > European Cinema > Spain
  • For more information about "Bad Education (Original Uncut NC-17 Edition)" visit the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)

Special Features

  • In Spanish with English subtitles
  • Audio Commentary with director Pedro Almodovar
  • Deleted Scenes
  • Red Carpet footage from the AFI Film Festival
  • Making of "Bad Education"
  • Photo Gallery, Poster Explorations, Previews

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Writer/director Pedro Almodóvar's dark, sexy Hitchcock homage is his best work since his Oscar-winning All About My Mother, and deepened by a sun-dappled sadness. Handsome, enigmatic Ángel (Gael García Bernal) arrives at the Spanish movie offices of director Enrique Goded (Fele Martinez) and happily proclaims that he's actually Enrique's long-lost school chum Ignacio--an announcement that is both less than convincing and more than it seems. A novice actor, Ángel pitches a semi-autobiographical screenplay in which he's determined to star, a revenge-laden reflection of the doomed love he and Enrique shared as boys before a pedophile priest cruelly intervened. The script, and the lost days it recalls, carefully unfurls into a series of brooding movies-within-movies and memories-inside-memories, which allow the sensual, multiple-role-playing Bernal to give the performance of his young career--among other things, he makes a stunningly convincing drag queen--and Almodóvar the opportunity to movingly suggest that people will pay any price to ensure that their stories are told. --Steve Wiecking


From The New Yorker

In an obscure parochial school in rural Spain, two young boys, Ignacio and Enrique, fell in love. But the boys were only eleven, and the affair was broken up by a priest and schoolmaster named Manolo. The priest, however, wasn't simply enforcing the rules. Father Manolo had already laid hands on Ignacio, a sweet-faced choirboy, and he wanted him entirely for himself. Pedro Almodóvar's extraordinary new movie, which is both a summary of his career and a deepening of his recent style, opens sixteen years after the affair, in 1980. Ignacio (Gael García Bernal), now a young actor, brings a manuscript to Enrique (Fele Martínez), who has become a well-known movie director in Madrid. The manuscript chronicles the boys' friendship and what happened to Ignacio-he became a drag queen and a blackmailer. We see the story enacted; later, Enrique turns it into a movie, and we see that being filmed, too, at which point the priest, now an ex-priest, shows up, and we hear his version of the events. The truth of what happened to the grownup Ignacio and Enrique emerges in pieces: the three narratives, as they expand and correct one another, become a trio of mirrors producing endless off-angle reflections. The movie asks: Is love possible between men, or is it possible only between innocent boys? In Spanish. -David Denby
Copyright © 2006 The New Yorker

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74 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (74 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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150 of 165 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gael Garcia Bernal as "homme fatal", August 19, 2004
By A. Hickman (Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria) - See all my reviews
This is the movie that confirms Gael Garcia Bernal's status as the most erotic male screen presence since Alain Delon doffed his shirt in "Plein Soleil." In this film he plays at least three characters, including Zahara, a drag queen, for which portrayal Pedro Almodovar, the director (who has a cameo in the film as a poolboy) has compared Bernal to Julia Roberts. Think sensuous lips. But most viewers, I believe, will prefer him as Juan, doing pushups on the floor of his brother's kitchen, or as Angel, diving into a swimming pool in his underwear. But even as Juan, in sunglasses at a museum in Valencia, Bernal may remind discriminating filmgoers of Barbara Stanwyck, in the famous grocery sequence in "Double Indemnity." Which brings me to an important point: Almodovar's film is many things--part autobiography, part exploration of sexuality--but it is above all a film noir, despite its bright colors, with Bernal as the "homme fatal." I think it works. Any fan of the genre will be familiar with its conventions: the reversals and betrayals, the characters who change names and even faces, the flash-backs and flash-forwards, the self-defeating ethical codes. Forget the Franco-era politics, if that's a stumbling block, and focus on the roller-coaster plot. And if the reappearance of the child-molesting Father Manolo as a sympathetic family man and victim of Juan's undeniable mystique bothers you, then do as the director and suspend judgment. This is topnotch cinema, by a master at the top of his form.
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71 of 78 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pandora's Box, December 24, 2004
By MICHAEL ACUNA (Southern California United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
Gael Garcia Bernal, playing Juan/Angel/Zahara is the centerpiece, the place in which the heart of this film resides, for it is his broken damaged heart that sets the tone and the focus of Almodovar's "Bad Education"
And at the core of Bernal's tour-de-force performance is his shredded psyche: broken apart by years spent plotting revenge for the drug addiction and childhood abuse of his brother, Ignacio. Juan is one of the "damaged people" of whom Tennessee Williams so often writes. And Almodovar has chosen to make Juan not only a hero but also a heroine, the femme fatale, Zahara.
Almodovar, never one to be squeamish or afraid of censure, is out for blood in "Bad Education" as he slices open and excises the sexual mores in Franco-era Catholicism in which child abuse was accepted as the norm. (Unfortunately, nothing seems to have changed much)
Moviemaker Enrique Goded (Fele Martinez) gets a visit one day from a man claiming to be Enrique's friend from school, Juan (Bernal) even though Enrique doesn't seem to recognize him as his Catholic school friend. Juan is very insistent that Enrique read a story he has brought with him. And it is this story that sets off a series of scenes into painful and disturbing memories about school, about love between boys, about hypocrisy among adults, about corruption in matters of the heart.
Almodovar has a very keen eye for the American movies of the 1950's and "Bad Education" is drenched with the dark, foreboding, and passionate colors of a Douglas Sirk film. But this is a film which acknowledges the past but whose mindset is of the Now.
Almodovar has made a thriller, a detective story but has done so with the heart of a romantic and he has used Enrique as his detective to try to solve the mystery that is Juan/Angel/Zahara. That Enrique finds out more than he bargained for is a given in an Almodovar film. That he unlocks a Pandora's Box of secrets, recriminations and corruptions and then quickly closes the lid to seal them up again signifies a filmmaker who is practicing the fine Art of showing rather than telling and explaining.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Tangled Tale of Exploitation, Ambition, and Revenge., April 19, 2005
"Bad Education" is writer/director Pedro Almodovar's remarkably creative comment on sexual abuse among Roman Catholic clergy, but it is far from being straightforward or confined to one theme. The film weaves a complex tale of exploitation, deceit, ambition, seduction, and blackmail that places a story within a story and shifts back and forth in time. Sixteen years after they attended school together, Ignacio Rodriguez (Gael Garcia Bernal) visits Enrique Goded (Fele Martinez), who was his closest friend when they were 10 years old. Enrique is now a famous film director in the midst of a minor creative crisis. Ignacio is an ambitious actor looking for a job, and he has brought a short story he wrote based on their childhood experiences for Enrique's consideration. The story, entitled "The Visit", tells of a female impersonator named Zahara who by chance meets his old schoolmate Enrique, whom he loved as a boy. Zahara is eager to see Enrique again, but after he has carried out an important errand: Zahara goes to the chapel at his old school to blackmail a priest, Father Manolo (Daniel Gimenez Cacho), who abused him as a boy. Enrique the director thinks the story would make a splendid film, but he soon discovers that nothing is quite as it seems.

With Gael Garcia Bernal playing both a "real" character and a fictional character that is a representation of a real character who is played by someone else; a chain of blackmail that begins in reality, continues in fiction, and then invades reality again; a fictional murder that mirrors a real one; and everything that goes around seems to come around, "Bad Education" risks being too clever for its own good at times. All of these twists and ironies are orchestrated to create structural and thematic symmetry, but they are interesting and convincing. The film's vibrant purples, oranges, reds, and teals look fantastic. Almodovar has a rare ability to make bright colors leap off the screen without being at all overbearing.

"Bad Education" gets reflexive when the characters attend a film noir marathon and declare, "It's as if all the films were talking about us." The word "noir" pops up conspicuously in another scene as well. I don't know how that was intended, but it's probably a good thing that the reference comes across as funny rather than self-conscious. That's not to deny the film's "noirness". Gael Garcia Bernal is an inspired homme fatal. And "Bad Education" is unlike other Almodovar films in that none of the characters are empathetic, except perhaps the children.

With their requisite sex, drugs, and transsexuals, Pedro Almodovar's films aren't to everyone's taste. But, for Almodovar fans, "Bad Education" is a winner. It's a pleasure to watch this twisted tale unfold. In Spanish with English subtitles.

The DVD (Columbia Tristar 2005 release): Bonus features include 2 featurettes, 2 deleted scenes, a "Photo Gallery" of poster art, and an audio commentary by writer/director Pedro Almodovar. "Red Carpet Footage from the AFI Film Festival" (18 minutes) includes some interviews intercut with film clips as well as Almodovar's introductory speech at AFI Fest. "Making of Bad Education" is just 2 minutes of unnarrated behind-the-scenes footage. The audio commentary by Pedro Almodovar is quite detailed and interesting. Almodovar provides scene-by-scene and occasionally shot-by-shot analysis of characters, story, structure, themes, and many other details. The commentary is in Spanish with English subtitles and is among the most useful audio commentaries I have found on DVD.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Pedro is a genius!
This film was amazing! Everything about this film was perfect. Gael Garcia Bernal gives an Oscar worthy performance, and Pedro Almodovar gives superb direction. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Adam

5.0 out of 5 stars Transvestite junkies and pedophile priests
Childhood friends Ignacio and Enrique haven't seen each other in decades, until one day when, out of the blue, Ignacio shows up at Enrique's house with a story that he has written... Read more
Published 14 months ago by Genevieve Hayes

5.0 out of 5 stars Smokin' in the Boy's Room
Frequently compared to American director, Douglas Sirk, Spain's Pedro Almodovar switches into Hitchcock mode with his twisty, sexually provocative thriller, "Bad Education"... Read more
Published 15 months ago by B. Wells

4.0 out of 5 stars a touching, complex story with great performances from the entire cast
A poignant, cinematically-breathtaking film with a plot so convoluted, I'm going to have to rewatch the movie just to see where all the storylines intersect and converge. Read more
Published 16 months ago by AIROLF

5.0 out of 5 stars Bravo!
That was perhaps one of the most well written, well directed foreign films I've seen in the past few years! Read more
Published 19 months ago by Blackitikat

3.0 out of 5 stars Visually Striking and Audaciously Acted But Ultimately Hollow Inside
Pedro Almodóvar's individualistic filmmaking style is on full display in this florid 2004 melodrama, but oddly, the heart that propelled the wonderful Talk to Her (Hable con Ella)... Read more
Published 21 months ago by Ed Uyeshima

3.0 out of 5 stars a nonintellectual opine
I purchased this for two reasons, Almoldovar and Gael Garcia Bernal. It depicts the harsh reality of ignorance within religious insitutions. Almoldovar does this very well. Read more
Published 22 months ago by Cheryl A. Kitchen

3.0 out of 5 stars The Medium Kills the Message
Ignacio and Enrique have a boyish crush on each other and their feelings are discovered by the priest at their boarding school. Read more
Published 23 months ago by Lynn Hoffman, author:The Short...

5.0 out of 5 stars As complete as could be expected
Paradoxically, this is one of Almodóvar's most inventive and attractive films, despite being perhaps his least profound. Read more
Published on August 29, 2007 by Robert Buchanan

5.0 out of 5 stars Bad Education
Potent, complex film from master Almodovar features a stunning, gender-bending performance from Garcia-Bernal, and an ingenious plot that has us shifting between Ignacio's story... Read more
Published on July 18, 2007 by John Farr

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