Surprise Ending Turns Spanglish Into a Triumph for James Brooks
Arts & Entertainment → Television / Movies
- Author Ed Bagley
- Published February 5, 2007
- Word count 644
Spanglish – 3 Stars (Good)
Spanglish is a relationship movie with a surprise ending in that the two principal characters in the movie actually do the right thing.
The story line involves a Mexican woman who emigrates to America with her daughter following a failed relationship to seek a better life. She becomes a housekeeper for an upscale family with some relationship problems, and becomes emotionally involved with the husband.
The husband (Adam Sandler) and the housekeeper (Paz Vega) manage to almost lose it but do not act on their impulses, separating at the end with the husband going back to his dysfunctional wife (Tea Leoni) and two children, and the housekeeper moving on to another chapter in her life.
This is so unlike Hollywood, where filmmakers in tinsel town cannot seem to get enough sex, violence and smut into a movie like this without regard for ethics, values or morals.
Everyone in this movie that actually matters is sensitive except the wife (who should know better) and the housekeeper's daughter (who is young and immature).
All you need to know about the cruel wife is that she buys new clothes for her daughter that are two sizes too small as an incentive for her to loose weight. The daughter is overweight and unattractive, but she is also smart, sensitive and funny. The wife then manages to fall into an illicit affair because of her insecurity and poor self-image.
The role of the wife Deborah is cast so off the wall that she is an unbelievable character involved in what is otherwise a good film with some great messages. I give credit to Tea Leoni for taking on this despicable role, and proving that you could blow an air gun into her ear and feel a constant breeze on the other side.
The husband, who becomes a celebrity chef, comes across as vacant sometimes, but he also shows some sensitivity, understanding and compassion while his wife is totally self-absorbed. I would see this film again, and cringe even more at the character, activity and decision-making of the wife.
It is so great to see Adam Sandler in a more serious acting effort than another inane, stupid comedy like Punch-Drunk Love. Sandler may not be Hollywood's answer to the next great actor, but he is capable of more than great comedy; we need to find out how much more.
Spanglish does not benefit at all from its title, which arises from a combination of Spanish and English (the housekeeper in the movie is initially reliant on her daughter to speak English because she cannot). Actually, there was a translator on the set because Paz Vega did not speak English and James L. Brooks (the director) did not speak Spanish.
Unfortunately, the title comes across as cute and sophomoric and tells us nothing about the nature of the movie or its message. The title, which could have helped build an audience for the film, does not induce any emotion or imagination. Spanglish picked up a couple of awards, but you will find no nominations or Oscars of significance here.
The film is written and directed by James L. Brooks, usually a prescription for a terrible film, but Brooks has broken the mold.
Brooks may be the first writer/director that I have not purposely panned because of a terrible product. He manages to tell a story worth seeing, and makes the characters seem more real and involved when it matters rather than wasting footage with another mindless sex scene for a ratings boost.
A lot of Americans just love sex, filth and violence. If you do not think so, watch a movie, turn on your television or play a video game (they make it because consumers almost demand it). Give Brooks credit for drawing the line and making the characters more important than any ratings they may generate.
Ed Bagley is the author of Ed Bagley's Blog, which he publishes daily with fresh, original articles on Internet Marketing, Jobs and Careers, Movie Reviews and Lessons in Life intended to delight, inform, educate and motivate readers. Visit Ed at . . .
Article source: https://articlebiz.comRate article
Article comments
There are no posted comments.
Related articles
- “When the Camera Lies: The True Stories Behind Hollywood’s Greatest Myths.”
- “Chaos Behind the Camera: Legendary On-Set Feuds and Filmmaking Nightmares That Changed Hollywood Forever.”
- “Alternate Reels: How Cinema Might Have Changed if History Rolled Differently.”
- “Francis Ford Coppola: Genius and Chaos in the Making of a Hollywood Legend.”
- Why the ARRI Alexa Mini Still Outnumbers Every 4K Flagship on Professional Sets
- “Marlon Brando: The Actor Who Changed Hollywood Forever.”
- “The Genius and the Scandal: Woody Allen’s Films and the Shadows Behind Them.”
- “Leonardo DiCaprio: The Reluctant Star Who Redefined Hollywood Stardom.”
- “Behind the Curtain: The Private World of Raymond Burr.”
- “From Pixels to Projectors: How Video Games Reshaped Modern Cinema.”
- “The Art of the Slow Burn: Revisiting 1970s American Cinema.”
- “Riding the Ponderosa: The Enduring Legacy of Bonanza.”
- “Navigating Nostalgia and Novelty in The Matrix Resurrections.”
- “Sin and Celluloid: Pre-Code Hollywood and the Scandalous Films Before the Censors Arrived.”
- North by Northwest: The Movie That Made Danger Look Effortlessly Cool.
- “Beyond the Lens: How Women Directors, Producers, and Writers Are Reshaping Cinema.”
- “Riding the Ponderosa: The Enduring Legacy of Bonanza.”
- “Beyond the Gavel: Cinema’s Most Compelling Courtroom Dramas.”
- Denzel Washington: Crafting a Legacy of Strength, Gravitas, and Change.
- “Blood, Power, and Legacy: The Godfather Trilogy’s Triumphs and Tragedies.”
- Visionaries Beyond Tomorrow: The Five Directors Who Reimagined Sci-Fi Cinema.
- “Greta Gerwig and the Rise of Women Behind the Camera in Hollywood.”
- “The Crown of Cinema: From Citizen Kane to The Godfather.”
- The Evolution of James Bond: Six Decades of Cinema’s Most Enduring Spy.
- The Man Behind the Cape: The Life and Tragic Fall of George Reeves.
- The 24-290 mm Paradox: Why a 12× Zoom from 2001 Still Outresolves Today’s 8K Sensors
- The 100 mm Paradox: Why the “Boring” Focal Length Is Quietly Becoming the Most Dangerous Tool on Set
- The Invisible Science Behind the "Natural" Look: How Modern Optics Quietly Rewrite Cinematic Language
- Mastering Smooth Transitions: How Crane Systems Shape Emotional Storytelling
- The Evolution of Compact Cinema Cameras: From Studio Rigs to Agile Setups