翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Divine Service (Eastern Orthodoxy)
・ Divine Service (Lutheran)
・ Divine Shepherd
・ Divine simplicity
・ Divine Songs
・ Divine Songs (Swamini Turiyasangitananda album)
・ Divine Songs Attempted in Easy Language for the Use of Children
・ Divine Sorrow
・ Divine soul
・ Divine soul (disambiguation)
・ Divina Pastora (Barquisimeto)
・ Divina Providência
・ Divina Trace
・ Divinas palabras
・ Divinas palabras (1977 film)
Divinas palabras (1987 film)
・ Divinatio in Caecilium
・ Divination
・ Divination (album)
・ Divination (disambiguation)
・ Divination by Astrological and Meteorological Phenomena
・ Divination By Mirrors for Saw and Strings
・ Divinatory, esoteric and occult tarot
・ Divine (album)
・ Divine (corporation)
・ Divine (disambiguation)
・ Divine (group)
・ Divine (performer)
・ Divine (Sébastien Tellier song)
・ Divine Action and Modern Science


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Divinas palabras (1987 film) : ウィキペディア英語版
Divinas palabras (1987 film)

'' Divinas palabras '' (English: ''Divine Words'') is a 1987 Spanish film directed by José Luis García Sánchez. It stars Ana Belén, Francisco Rabal and Imanol Arias. The film is based upon the play by Ramón del Valle-Inclán. A Mexican adaptation was released in 1977 starring the Mexican actress Silvia Pinal and directed by Juan Ibáñez.
==Plot==
The setting of the film is the province of Galicia, circa, 1920, in the impoverished village of San Clemente. Since the Village has no priest, ecclesiastic authority falls to Pedro Gailo, the sacristan, who has a young beautiful wife Mari Gaila. Greedy for any money that comes their way and eager to leave San Clemente and her husband, Mari cares for a hydrocephalus-stricken child and uses him to beg for alms. The child becomes the source of their wealth.
Comfortable in the joint guardianship of the child with her sister-in-law Marica, Mari Gaila, encouraged by another beggar woman nicknamed “la Tatula’, decides to go to various fairs and festivals and there puts the hydrocephalus dwarf on display, in order to wheedle funds from good-natured, pitying, sympathetic people. Her husband, Pedro, the sacristan, is afraid that Mari’s activities will ruin his reputation, but his love of money overcomes his fear and pride. Maria Galia sets out for the nearest city, confronting a world she never knew existed, full of music, cattle trading fairs and picturesque people. She becomes the object of desire of other nomad beggars like herself, especially shrewd tricksters like Septimio Miau.
Drawn sexually to this handsome outlaw, after a mild flirtation with him she leaves for home, loaded with money. The townspeople begin to gossip about her sudden wealth and freedom to leave the village at will. Mari Gaila meets up with Septimo again, teams up with him, using the hydrocephalus child as a freak exhibit, and decides to run off with him. While they are making love, the locals ply the hydrocephalus child with liquor at the local tavern, causing his death.
Septimo deserts Mari Gaila, who becomes ill and returns to the sacristan, empty handed. But Pedro Gailo uses his nephew’s corpse, showing off his gigantic member to families in other villages to make money. Later, Septimo returns and Rosa la Tatula acts as a go between. The lovers meet in a forest, consummate their affair and are caught by their jealous neighbors.
Disgraced, desperate and poor, Mari Gaila is striped nude, spat upon, mocked and stoned. The crowd ends its vengeance when Pedro, the sacristan, pronounces the “divine words" in Latin: “Let him who is free of sin cast the first stone”. These words in the midst of such squalor are ironic yet miraculous, causing the crowd to disperse and look into their own motives. They are downtrodden peasants caught in a claustrophobic world, scheming, dirty people with nowhere to go.
After the crowd leaves, Pedro maintains a saintly pose, forgiving his adulterous wife. Mari Gaila seems too clean and noble to have groveled in this squalor and comes off seeming almost saintly herself.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Divinas palabras (1987 film)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.