Like that tube of Monistat 3 in the medicine cabinet, the possibility of hot and
sexy romance in one's dotage is reassuring, but how much do we really want to think
about the circumstances in which it'll be needed? That, in a nutshell, is the potential
problem facing this tender-hearted, sweetly humorous 1996 Argentine film about love
between sophisticated sexagenarians in modern Buenos Aires. As a seemingly mismatched
pair brought together by an unattached Jewish woman's newspaper ad (she wants him
to pose as her Jewish boyfriend while her Orthodox brother is visiting), longtime
Latin-American stars Aleandro and Luppi are a constant joy to watch. Eloquently portraying
both the vulnerability of old age and a stubborn refusal to let these fears quell
their appetite for life, they prove once more that erotic sizzle is more than just
chemical call-and-response between Soloflex-buffed young hardbodies. And yet, judging
from the mildly disappointing turnouts for recent November-December romantic fare
such as That Old Feeling and Out to Sea, there's some doubt about how comfortable
Americans really are with images of old folks as fully functional sexual entities.
It'd be a shame, though, if a movie as involving, well-acted, and beautifully shot
failed to achieve the strong arthouse response it deserves. Not only do Luppi (Men
With Guns, Cronos) and Aleana present images of mature ardor that compare favorably
with the late-career work of Mastroianni and Loren, they also impressively overcome
certain Hollywood-like contrivances of plot and dialogue the latter two actors seldom
had to contend with. It's a tribute to these stars that, even given the trite situation
of the love-shy odd couple gradually facing the inevitable, every halting step they
take toward each other feels like a mini-triumph of love's power over the schoolmarmish
intellect. They portray with touching specificity what it's like to crave total surrender
to love even after long years of experience have proven the foolhardiness of such
blind leaps. Not even the blatantly market-tested ending (a malady that seems to
be spreading worldwide like Hong Kong flu) detracts from the pleasure of this admirable,
eminently watchable date flick. Well worth the price of admission, whether or not
you qualify for the senior discount.
--Russell Smith
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