[quote name='sarausagi']Only two, on digital cable: All About My Mother and Talk to Her.
I read about Shortbus just now, it does sound like that..
My thing is, I just don't like..I don't know..such "explicit" movies. There's films that are so powerful without being "explicit" or "mature"....so it's kind of like
'Okay, Almodovar, could you direct a sweet innocent love story and still blow people's minds?"
It just strikes me as the kind of director who without some kind of imagery or crudeness, can't direct a good movie.[/quote]Despite the explicit content and settings, I find Almodovar's work full of warmth and tenderness But, the thing you have to remember is that (and seeing your views on "film" in general, this may be a stretch) cinema is an artform, and Almodovar is an artist. The artist explores the themes and ideas that appeal most to him, he deals with his own issues and demons through his art. I'd even go as far as to say in most cases that an artist doesn't even choose his own content; it chooses him.
I'm not going to pretend to know why Almodovar chooses the subjects he does. They almost always revolve around women (mother, sister?) or drag queens (his own desire to be a woman?). I don't know much about his life and I don't mind..the less definitive the answers, the better. Bergman has his metaphysical explorations of man and his place in the universe, Hitchcock deals with guilt and almost always made suspenseful films, Kurosawa explores the relation between illusion and reality. One theory I'm liking lately is that a true artist should show you the world through his eyes, the world as he sees it, and that goes hand-in-hand with the idea of an artist exploring the ideas that mean the most to him, and that's what Almodovar does.