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MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN
(“A Mi Madre
Le Gustan Las Mujeres”)
A FILM BY
INES PARIS and DANIELA FEJERMAN
STARRING
Leonor Watling Rosa
Maria Sarda Silvia Abascal Maria Pujalte
A Norador Productions Release
Distribution Contact: Norador
Productions 101 W. 79th Street Suite 21C New York, NY 10024 212-877-6417 212-877-1949 noraspers@aol.com
Publicity
contact: Lauren Hyman Publicity 336 W. 37th St Suite 902
New York, NY 10018 Tel. 212-643-8234 Email. LSHyman@optonline.net
MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN (“A Mi Madre Le Gustan Las Mujeres”)
CAST
LEONOR WATLING Elvira ROSA MARIA
SARDA Sofia MARIA PUJALTE Jimena SILVIA ABASCAL Sol ELISKA SIROVA Eliska CHISCO AMADO
Miguel ALEX ANGULO Editor AITOR MAZO Psychologist XABIER ELORRIAGA Carlos
CREW
DIRECTORS
Ines Paris and Daniela Fejerman SCREENWRITERS Ines Paris and Daniela Fejerman EXECUTIVE PRODUCER Beatriz
de la Gandara PRODUCTION MANAGER Marta Miro DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY David Omedes MUSIC Juan
Bardem EDITOR Fidel Collados ART DIRECTOR Soledad Sesena SOUND Julio Recuero COSTUME DESIGNER Vicente
Ruiz
A Norador Productions release Aspect ratio: 185 Unrated by the MPAA In Spanish with English subtitles Running
time: 93 minutes
“MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN” SYNOPSIS
MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN (“A Mi Madre Le Gustan Las Mujeres”)
is an uproarious comedy about three sisters whose lives are thrown off-kilter by their mother’s sudden sexual awakening.
“Sofia,” (Rosa Maria Sarda from “All About My Mother”), a renowned pianist, is long separated from the daughters’ father.
It is on the occasion of her birthday that she delivers a stunning announcement: she has fallen in love again. Clearly smitten,
she begins to describe her new lover: somewhat younger…also a pianist. The daughters, thrilled and eager to hear more, are
interrupted by the doorbell. A woman walks in.
The daring feature debut of Spanish directors Ines Paris and Daniela
Fejerman, MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN traces the emotional landscape of a “modern” family that nevertheless registers seismic shock
at this unexpected news. Sofia’s daughters are the children of left-wing intellectuals. Yet, even their progressive background
hasn’t prepared them for the emotions they experience when their mother brings her new lover into their lives.
Leonor
Watling (“Talk to Her.” “My Life Without Me”) leads the engaging ensemble cast in her role as the beautiful, neurotic daughter
“Elvira.” Elvira’s shrink (Aitor Mazo) has been advising her to quit her job in publishing to write novels full time. He
urges her to approach her mother about a temporary loan, but it appears that most of Sofia’s funds have already gone to pay
off loans for “Eliska,” (Eliska Sirova) her Czech lover. Sister “Sol” (Silvia Abascal) the edgy lead singer of a rock band,
sees her mother’s new sexual orientation as inspiration for her songwriting. And “Jimena,” (Maria Pujalte), struggles with
her own preconceptions, resulting in a face-off with her conventional husband.
Screwball comedy takes hold as the
daughters begin to feel threatened by their mother’s new lifestyle. The daughters suspect that Sofia’s lover might be a gold-digger,
thus hurtling them into a frenzied effort to “rescue” her. Their hilariously calibrated plot to separate the lovers involves
Sol’s vixen-like seduction of Eliska whom they lure to a fresh-air outing. When it becomes clear that the real spark exists
between the serious and sensitive Eliska and the literary Elvira, the sisters pressure Elvira to carry out the seduction.
This throws the already-imbalanced Elvira into a profound crisis of sexual identity. It also compounds her confusion about
her growing feelings for the impossibly wonderful “Miguel,” (Chisco Amado), who could potentially be the love of her life.
After
a few disastrous attempts to pursue a “healthy” relationship with Miguel, Elvira ends up at a bar with Eliska. Elvira finds
comfort in their new friendship, but having drunk too much, an embarrassing encounter ensues and the two women pass out at
Elvira’s apartment.
The next morning when Eliska returns home, she finds a distraught and accusatory Sofia. Feeling
horribly misunderstood, even though she is still desperately in love with Sofia, she flees to her homeland.
Having
succeeded in their frivolous plot, the daughters soon see the folly of having tried to separate their mother from her true
love. Sofia is inconsolable and unproductive.
Determined to undo their bad deed and see their mother happy again,
Elvira, Sol, and Jimena set off on an impulsive journey to the Czech Republic to win Eliska back.
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“MY
MOTHER LIKES WOMEN” NOTES ON PRODUCTION
“MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN is a comedy about the new kinds of relationships,
that have come about with the dawn of this century,” says director Daniela Fejerman. The core of the film - how three daughters
react to the news that their mother has fallen in love with another woman – provides a means of exploring how it is possible
to navigate a world where the family is not what it was. MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN is not so much about lesbianism per se, but
about “new families” and the changing of traditional social and sexual modes.
“The idea of addressing the relationship
we both maintain with our parents was very much with us during the making of the film, “ says director Ines Paris. “Both
of us are daughters of progressive parents and have lived with the experience of having parents who, no matter how hard we
try to surpass them, are always more modern than we are. “We belong to a generation that is accustomed to questioning established
values,” says Fejerman. “This is part of the inheritance our parents have left us. For that reason, MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN
is dedicated to them.”
The challenging of some of those traditions was also reflected in the film shoot itself. The
crew was composed mostly of women; from the directors and executive producers, to the art directors, production assistants
and make-up artists.
The filmmakers enlisted a sublime ensemble cast for the film. The screenwriters/directors chose
to tell the story of MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN through their protagonist, Elvira, played by Leonor Watling. “Because Elvira is
on the point of turning thirty, she is a resonant character who centers the plot; her mother’s announcement only heightens
the turmoil in her unsettled, neurotic life,” says Paris. Watling, in a radical departure from her role in “Talk to Her,”
was the first actress the filmmakers approached for the role. “Leonor imbued her character with an enormous range of gestures
and an original ‘soul.’ She has the ability to take risks and try all possible registers for the character,” says Fejerman.
Sofia’s
other daughters are played by Silvia Abascal who plays “Sol,” and Maria Pujalte who plays “Jimena.” “We were astonished by
Silvia’s ability to transform herself into a provocative rocker – on stage, proving that she not only acts, but can sing and
dance like a star, “ says Fejerman. As for Maria, the directors enjoyed seeing her construct a character that is so far removed
from past roles.
Rosa Maria Sarda, well known for her role in Almodovar’s “All About My Mother,” plays “Sofia.” Paris
describes Sofia as “a women who has always faced the challenges in her personal and professional life with courage. She’s
capable of being a mother and an artist without denying her ‘self.’” “Rosa and Eliska Sirova were successful at communicating
the quiet truth and tenderness of their love story in front of the camera,” says Fejerman.
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INES
PARIS AND DANIELA FEJERMAN DIRECTORS OF “MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN”
Ines Paris and Daniela Fejerman are the screenwriters
and directors of MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN. As a team they have worked together since 1993, having directed prize-winning short
films and writing for film and television. MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN marks the first Spanish feature film that was co-directed
by two women.
Paris and Fejerman directed their first short film, “How Did I Get Mixed Up In This?” in 1997 for which
they garnered impressive awards. This led to their second directing effort in 1999: “Let’s Leave It,” a short which also
won several awards.
Among their screenwriting credits is the highly acclaimed “Se Quien Eres,” directed by Patricia
Ferreira, which finished 2nd place for the Audience Award at Berlin and won Best Screenplay at the Tudela Festival. They
have written scripts for directors Emilio Martinez Lazaro and Enrique Urbizu as well as the upcoming “La Mirada Violeta” for
director Nacho Perez de la Paz and Jesus Ruiz. In 2003, they won 2nd prize at the Television Academy Awards for “Pringado,”
a script about the world of television.
Paris and Fejerman’s extensive television credits include the Taller de Comedias
de Situacion (Sitcom Workshop) run by TVE, where they wrote numerous series between 1989 and 1993. Since 1993, they have
written for Spanish television channels, writing dramas like “Mar De Dudas,” directed by Manuel Gomez Pereira, and comedies
like Todos los hombres sois iguales” produced by Bocaboca for Tele 5, and “Famosos y familia” directed by Fernando Colomo.
Their
academic backgrounds in Philosophy (Paris) and Psychology (Fejerman) strongly influence their work. They both trained and
began their professional involvement in the theatre, first as actresses and later as a writer (Fejerman) and stage designer
(Paris). They have taught scriptwriting at Carlos III University in Madrid, at the San Antonio de los Banos Film School in
Cuba, and at the Videoteca in Madrid.
They are presently in production on their second feature film: “Semen, “a frenetic
romantic comedy about artificial insemination which is also produced by Fernando Colomo.
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LEONOR
WATLING “Elvira” Leonor Watling is the actress of the moment in Spanish cinema. Born of a Spanish father and an English
mother, Leonor was a dancer and a singer before becoming an actress. After suffering a knee injury, and forced to stop dancing,
she made her theatrical debut at the age of fifteen. Although Leonor starred in her first feature film in 1993 in
Pablo Llorca’s “Jardines colgantes” (“Hanging Gardens”), she became widely known early in her acting career for roles in several
extremely successful television series. The first of these was Antonio Mercero’s “Farmacia de guardia” followed by “Hermanos
de leche” and “Querido maestro.” It was, in fact, Mercero who awarded her the lead role in his feature film “La hora de los
valientes” (“Hour of the Brave” 1998), alongside Gabino Diego, a part that was to lead to her first Goya nomination for Best
Actress. The director Pablo Llorca worked with Leonor again in “Todas hieren” (1997) and “La espalda de Dios” (“Behind God’s
Back” 1999). Leonor starred in her first English-language production, a spaghetti-western for TNT called “The Long Kill”
with Kris Kristofferson and Willie Nelson in 1998. Her flawless English served her well as a voiceover actress; she dubbed
the voices for Aitana Sánchez Gijón and Penélope Cruz when their films were translated into English. With the series “Raquel
busca su sitio” for RTVE, anyone who had yet to notice her soon discovered her, and Leonor quickly became one of the most
admired actresses of Spain. The director Bigas Luna, after a long hiatus from filmmaking, selected her to play the lead in
“Son de mar” (“Sound of the Sea,”) alongside Jordi Moyá Luna. As a result of this role, she was awarded the Sant Jordi cinematographic
award for Best Spanish Actress in 2000.
The year 2002 was a banner year for Leonor, with three hit films at the box
office: Pedro Almodovar’s “Hable con Ella” (“Talk to Her”), Gerardo Vera’s “Deseo’” (“Desire”), and MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN.
“Talk to Her” enabled Leonor to achieve the international exposure that almost all of the Oscar-winning director’s films command;
Almodóvar was awarded his second Golden Globe for this film.
Spanish critics have called Leonor’s role in MY MOTHER
LIKES WOMEN “a hybrid of any of Woody Allen’s best parts.” In addition, her performance as the neurotic “Elvira” won her
a Goya nomination in 2002 for Best Actress, and the Best Actress award at the 2002 Miami Latino Film Festival.
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ROSA MARIA SARDA
“Sofia”
Rosa Maria Sarda is one of the most popular and beloved actresses
working in Spain today. She has been acting steadily in films and television since she began her career in 1965.
After
becoming emblematic for her leading roles in several Spanish television series, she began her film career in Ventura Pons’
“El Vicari D’Olot” in 1981. Her extensive filmography includes such well-known titles as “Allegre Ma Non Troppo” and “The
Butterfly Effect,” both directed by Fernando Colomo. Her long association with Pons continued as she starred in his “Actrices”
(1996), “Caricias” (1997), “Amic Amat” (1998), and most recently in “Anita No Pierde El Tren” (2000).
Rosa Maria is
perhaps best known to U.S.audiences for her role as Sister Rosa’s (Penelope Cruz) mother in Pedro Almodovar’s 2001 film “All
About My Mother.” Rosa Maria won a Best Supporting Actress Goya Award in 1992 for her extraordinary performance
in “Why Do They Call It Love When They Mean Sex?” directed by Manuel Gomez Pereira and she has presented and directed several
television shows including the Goya Awards ceremony on several occasions.
SILVIA ABASCAL
“Sol”
Born in
1979, Silvia Abascal was only thirteen when she made her acting debut on the wildly popular Spanish television series “Un
Dos Tres.” She went on to star in several television series that made her instantly recognizable throughout Spain.
Since
her film debut in Manolo Iborra’s “El Tiempo De La Felicidad” in 1996, she has carried lead roles in “Don Juan Tenorio” (1997),
“La Fuente Amarilla” (1998) “La Voz De Su Amo (2000), and MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN.
MARIA PUJALTE
“Jimena”
Maria
Pujalte has had an illustrious career in Spanish cinema and television. She began her film career with a role in Pedro Carvajal’s
“Martes De Carnaval” (1990) and went on to star in “El Baile De Las Animas” (1993), “Entre Rojas” (1994), “Libertarias” (1995),
“El Grito En El Cielo,” “Insomnio,” and Perdona Bonita Pero Lucas Me Queria A Mi,” (all in 1996), and “Los Lobos De Washington”
(1997) before she assumed the role of “Jimena” in MY MOTHER LIKES WOMEN.
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