DVD: Ma Ma | reviews, news & interviews
DVD: Ma Ma
DVD: Ma Ma
Penélope Cruz controls a cancer melodrama

Penélope Cruz has rarely been better, though her director Julio Medem has seldom been worse. As Magda, she’s an earthy everywoman, whether dealing with an errant husband, protecting her son Dani, or treating breast cancer with wry stoicism.
Medem rewrote an old script for her, but he hardly seems the same director who in the likes of The Red Squirrel, Tierra and Sex and Lucia hallucinated meaning from Spanish sex and soil. He was a sensual visionary as wonderful as Almodóvar in the 1990s, working initially with his muse Emma Suárez (whom Almodóvar has returned to centre-stage with Julieta). Time and space bent in Medem narratives where the fault, if any, was obliqueness. Magda is the most straightforward of his revered women, even if her stubborn willpower verges on the supernatural. The ripe, old-fashioned melodrama of her life meanwhile teeters towards farce, not least when Dr. Julian breaks into cheesy Spanish pop songs.
Cancer’s grimness is neither ignored nor indulged, signifying tragedy but with its physical reality kept at a distance. Ma Ma is weirder than the weepies Hollywood has made from the disease, and sketches in some social background, at a time of Spanish football success and economic collapse. If you let yourself be swept along by Cruz, its big-hearted optimism is sometimes very moving. It’s also increasingly ridiculous, as if Medem has spliced Douglas Sirk with Mamma Mia!
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