Paz Vega Movie:

Solo Mia



   Paz Vega

  Pictures
  Posters
  Movies
  News
  Bio
  Latest Photos
  Wallpapers
  Pics
  Video Clips
  On TV

  Celebrity Movies




Paz Vega Movie:
Solo Mia



Movie
Solo Mia
Solo Mia
List Price: $19.95Label: Fox Lorber

Salesrank: 65654

Released: May 18, 2004
Our Price: $12.78
Used Price: $9.07
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Anamorphic
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • DVD
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Sergi López
  • Paz Vega
  • Elvira Mínguez
  • Alberto Jiménez
  • María José Alfonso
  • Editorial Review:
    For Angela (Paz Vega) and Joaquin (Sergi Lopez), it was love at first sight, and then destiny followed. For a few months, their marriage was perfect and when she became pregnant, they both felt blessed. However, after the birth of the baby, things changed. Joaquin began to show signs of a hidden personality…one fueled by jealousy and anger. It was not long before he physically started taking his frustrations out on Angela. At first, she tried to stick things out - until one day it went too far. Frustrated by a system that offered no help, she finally decided to take the matter into her own hands.

    Solo Mia Reviews:
    Paz Vega can do almost everything. 5 Star Review
    2008-04-02 - I enjoyed this movie, really, it's part of the human culture, the man feels that the woman is a property, then he can do anything without limits. As humans we should know that every experience is wonderful if we share and make some others happy but with this movie I realiced that human is looking for happines somewhere else.
    She made me feel that sad and powerless that every abused woman feel all the world arround, not just in Spain, Mexico or America.


    Great film performed by a great cast. 5 Star Review
    2006-04-01 - This first scene of this film caught my attention immediately, it was sort of telling me "Sit tight and pay attention Jenny." "Sólo mía' is another film about gender violence in the family. It adopts a totally different attitude to the subject matter when compared with Icíar Bollaín's film which is at once more subtle in its telling.
    `Sólo mía' shoves the nitty-gritty between your teeth so that you can choke on it: some of the scenes are too explicit, one might argue, and are numerously frequent; in `Te doy Mis Ojos' the hard subject matter is more carefully handled.

    However, Paz Vega, who starred in `Lucía y el Sexo' (qv) the same year, put in a recommendable performance as the badly beaten and tortured young mother; Sergi López as her husband plays his part well, though at times seemed to over forcefully portray his performance, thus almost beggaring belief. It should be said that his role was very tricky, to say the least. I feel that Luis Tosar carried off his performance in `Te doy Mis Ojos' more convincingly, with better balancing between the extremes of tensions and feelings.

    The rest of the cast form a good back-up to the leading couple.

    This film also points an accusing finger at the legal system, in which hypocritical legalities and aloofness does little - or nothing - to help solve this horrifying situation so evident today in so many headlines in Spain today. Something has got to be done: more than 70 women were killed in `gender violence' in Spain in 2003. At the end it's a great film, I truly admire European cinema that doesn't sugar coat their films. Highly recommended.


    The eternal ritornello! 5 Star Review
    2005-11-16 - The typical aberrant behavior of the best known Latin expression "machismo" -that fortunately is decreasing- is shown with all the brutal realism.

    The sudden transformation of a man who was in love, occurs precisely after knowing his happy wife is pregnant. The gradual tension will be increasing when the violence speech and the physical agressions become normal.

    The levels of desperation and slow but effective arousing about the awful reality of this distorted situation will resolve violently. It seems that there is no way out.

    Extraordinary script, and fabulous performances, specially in what Paz Vega, the raising and promising Spanish actress concerns.

    A theme that securely, will be the cause of similar adaptations in the near future. It is time to open the closed respect this miserable way of behavior.

    Bold film!

    Worth a viewing... 4 Star Review
    2004-08-09 - I was at the video store and picked this one up on a whim, recently having become an avid foreign film watcher.The movie focuses on a couple (Sergi Lopez and Paz Vega) and their stormy relationship. The two meet at the office where he works and she has just gotten a job. Things start off well. He gets along with her family and friends. She becomes fast friends with his coworker's wife (Elvira Minguez). She becomes pregnant with their first child. He sees that she has been smoking one day and hits her. This is the first signs of the violence that only escalates after the child is born. She confides in her friends and family, who initially play it off, but soon become worried when she starts to show bruises. The two get a divorce but he continues to follow her and, when she tries to get some justice, the court system fails her. She tries to make well with him but comes to the realization that she dislikes him greatly after all he's done, leading to a climactic ending. Sometimes the melodrama is a bit cheesy, but you can feel her fear as she gets no help from the justice system and must take matters into her own hands. Lopez effectively portrays a man who seems to know he's done wrong, yet can't find a way to change himself. Good performances all around. Worth a viewing.










    Click here for more detailed information about the
    Paz Vega movie:

    'Solo Mia
    '