Mujeres Al Borde De Un Ataque De Nervios-1988-a... May 2026
Almodóvar once said, "I’ve always thought that comedy is much more cruel than tragedy. Tragedy dignifies pain. Comedy laughs at it."
In lesser hands, a sleeping pill-laced cold soup would be a macabre joke. In Almodóvar’s, it’s a . Every woman in the film is simmering—professionally, romantically, sexually. The gazpacho is simply the moment they stop simmering and start boiling over. Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios-1988-A...
Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios does both. It takes women on the verge—and puts them right at the center of the universe. “They call it a nervous breakdown. I call it Tuesday.” — Pepa (Carmen Maura), Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios Rating: ★★★★★ Essential for fans of: John Waters’ Female Trouble , Douglas Sirk’s All That Heaven Allows , and anyone who has ever cried while chopping vegetables. Almodóvar once said, "I’ve always thought that comedy
Then came Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios ( Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown ). In Almodóvar’s, it’s a
It wasn't just a film; it was a . For the first time, Almodóvar traded punk chaos for pop-art precision. The result? An Oscar nomination (Best Foreign Language Film), a Goya sweep (7 wins), and the sudden, undeniable realization that Spanish cinema was no longer a footnote—it was a vibrant, screaming, red-lipsticked lead. 2. The Plot in One Irresistible Sentence A voice actress, Pepa (Carmen Maura), is abandoned by her lover Iván (Fernando Guillén), leading her to accidentally drug a suitcase full of gazpacho, host a hostage-taking Shiite terrorist, and chase her ex across Madrid in a taxi driven by her best friend’s son—all while wearing shoulder pads that could deflect bullets. Yes, that’s a romantic comedy. 3. The Secret Ingredient: Gazpacho as Narrative Weapon Let’s talk about the real star of the film: the spiked gazpacho .
Iván, the object of all this chaos, is a narcissistic voice actor with a terrible haircut. He literally dubs other people’s emotions for a living. He has no agency. The real drama happens between women: Pepa, the jilted lover; Lucia, the vengeful wife; Candela (María Barranco), the model who accidentally slept with a terrorist; and Marisa (Rossy de Palma), the silent, angel-faced fiancée of Pepa’s taxi-driving friend.