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Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!

1989 [SPANISH]

Action / Comedy / Crime / Drama / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Rossy de Palma Photo
Rossy de Palma as Traficante de drogas en Vespa
Victoria Abril Photo
Victoria Abril as Marina Osorio
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
938.59 MB
1280*682
Spanish 2.0
NC-17
23.976 fps
1 hr 42 min
P/S ...
1.88 GB
1920*1024
Spanish 5.1
NC-17
23.976 fps
1 hr 42 min
P/S 1 / 11

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by blanche-27 / 10

Crazy for you

Pedro Almodovar's "Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!" from 1989 is an earlier film from this quirky director. Almodovar's characters are inevitably off the wall and in bizarre situations. This film and its characters are no exception.

"Tie Me Up!" was given an X rating (later NC-17) for a couple of scenes and in the United States at least, it was quite controversial.

The story concerns a recently-released mental hospital patient, Ricky (Antonio Banderas) who kidnaps an ex-porn star, Marina (Victoria Abril) currently making a low-budget horror film. Though the title suggests S&M, there isn't any. Ricky ties her up when he needs to leave the apartment.

An expert in carpentry, locksmithing, and other usable occupations, Ricky had actually been leaving the mental hospital when he felt like it and then returning. During one of those times, he had a one-night stand with Marina.

Deeply in love with her, he stalks her on the film set and, when she doesn't speak to him, confronts her in her apartment, declaring his love and his intention of marrying her and fathering her children. Marina, of course, would like to escape him, but Ricky makes that difficult. A former heroin addict, Marina has a toothache and explains that nothing will help except strong medicine from her doctor up the street. So Ricky handcuffs her to him and they walk to the doctor's apartment, where Marina receives an injection and a prescription.

Later, when she needs more drugs, Ricky goes to the town square to score some and ends up beaten to a pulp. When he returns, Marina is horrified and begins to have real feelings for him.

Meanwhile, her sister Lola (Loles Leon) is worried, believing Marina to have disappeared.

There is a very long sex scene in this film that took 9 hours to film, with Almodovar using the last take.

"Tie Me Up!" launched Banderas in the United States, and this is his last film with Almodovar. He plays Ricky beautifully - as an innocent from a troubled background who will do anything to convince this woman to love him. Abril is a sexy and feisty Marina, and, like Ricky, she is a lost soul trying to find her way. Ricky is an orphan; Abril has a mother, sister, and nephew, but both of them are alone in their worlds.

Despite the title and the sex, this is actually a sweet tale with likable characters. Almodovar often has a bizarre way of telling a story and making a point, but the results, with few exceptions, are well worth it.

Reviewed by Quinoa19848 / 10

two-thirds of a fantastic dark comedy on the nature of sexual insanity, though not as successful as later Almodovar

It's safe to say that even in a film by Pedro Almodovar that is only marginally successful within the margins there are some good, steamy, questionable times to be had. I can just imagine Pedro sitting in front of his notebook just figuring out ways to mix sex, film-making, kidnapping, and other lewd exercises into some kind of cohesive single film. What makes a very good chunk of Tie Me Up, Tie Me Down exciting satirically is that Almodovar never gives in to making anything TOO serious. Which is perhaps what ends up transitioning the situation Ricky (Antonio Banderas) and Marina (Victoria Abril) are in from the absurd and flirtingly masochistic to the (ironically) conventional and quasi-sweetness that is obviously deep in Almodovar. Perhaps the tying up and re-tying becomes part of a metaphor on the filmmaker's part, that despite it being something very dangerous and totally provocative it's also inviting in ways that would be elusive otherwise. Then again, that the material does (mostly) work, by being so disturbing in the bluntness and perpetually deranged mind-set of Ricky, but then in the human connections that are enhanced all the more. If only the motivations- even in such loose and wacky-Almodovar circumstances- were a little more convincing.

Nevertheless, I liked a lot about Tie Me Up, Tie Me Down up until it goes off the rails with its logic turning into knots (simply, I just don't buy that Marina falls for Ricky just like that, even if she was an ex-junkie porn star, and Ricky's advances are like that of a uppity, headstrong but shy 13 year old, a slight reminder of A Life Less Ordinary's bizarrely innocuous kidnapping turned romance). Chiefly, the performances and the usually arty-yet-trashy style from Almodovar and his crew. Banderas is, by the way, in one of his best and funniest performances here, a near emblem of the male ideal for a life with a woman, and a with an innocent yet fervent attraction to bondage, with that perfect look in his eyes detailing all even in brief moments. Yet there was something about his stay in the mental home all those years that did something to his ideas towards sex and what it is to live, and Banderas captures this mix of intense sadism crossed with the heart of an old Hollywood-studio leading man who will do anything to brush the leading lady off of her feet. Abril is always believable too, even when Almodovar gives her character a turn around into something more akin to an exploitation film, however sweet it tries to be. While she decides to underplay her immediate fear of her kidnapper, it works to add a level of comic timing to Ricky's own odd-ball ways. They make a great pair, really, especially when it comes to that 'turning point', where Almodovar uses his unique style to get five ceiling-mirrored shot of a pivotal scene.

There's also a fantastic role of the director of the film Marina is starring in at the start of the film, the aged Maximo Espejo (Francisco Rabal, who's been in countless films including the Eclipse and Belle de Jour),who has the ideas burning and changing around at a beat as to what his ending will be for his actress- death, being saved, something else? His moments on screen display a richness that lies often in Almodovar's script, where the surreal pressures of shooting the movie for Maximo somewhat carry over- and sort of dissipate as the characters become vulnerable- into that realm where reality and un-reality cross paths. This is heightened, and made a little additionally conventional, by the musical score, which like many of Almodovar's work is a tip of the hat to Herrmann compositions and old Hollywood romantic classics. There's even an emotional upheaval when Ricky and Marina meet again on that balcony overlooking the vista. The wildest thing about the picture is that one does become absorbed in the push and pull relationship between 'kidnapper' and 'kidnapee' (I quote that for its a little redundant to use those terms as the film goes on),and that these f***ed up people are practically the most average couple you'd ever meet. There's sensational comedy stacked in there too, in Ricky's behavior (moustache),the film within the film being shot (that strongman character is amazing),the random TV commercial about Spanish retirees, and just the consistent absurdity in the repetitive, ritual-side of the tying up and down. But there's something missing in Almodovar's third act to live up to the better parts early on, and he chickens out on really making this a much better, more challenging effort. I'll probably watch it someday again though, if only for Banderas and Rabals' performances.

Reviewed by MartinHafer2 / 10

While this is exactly what feminism and the Me Too Movement abhor, it's all okay since it's an art film....or is it?!

The fact that "Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!" was done by Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar isn't much of a surprise. Almodóvar made himself famous for making kinky, offensive films that push boundaries and so an NC-17 rated film by him certainly isn't shocking. After all, this is the same auteur filmmaker who made "What Have I Done to Deserve This", a film where a VERY dysfunctional mother encourages her son to go hang out with the local pedophile because he gives the kid nice stuff! He's also the director who much later made a film where a surgeon kidnapped a guy, gave him a sex change and then raped her ("The Skin I Live In"...also starring Antonio Banderas). Clearly the filmmaker LIKES pushing boundaries and offending....and it's made him famous, rich and the darling of many fans. Here in "Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!" he makes a comedy about a stalker who kidnaps a porn star and he KNOWS over time she'll become his willing sex slave and lover!! All the while, you see many, many images of Jesus...apparently in a further attempt to create controversy.

I noticed that the reviews either adored the film (thinking it hilarious or very artsy) or thought it was vile garbage that romanticizes rape. Well, it does seem odd that in an age of feminism and the Me Too Movement, somehow Almodóvar STILL is given a pass by many....and apparently the rule these days is that if folks REALLY like a director's films, then these sorts of subjects (or personal behaviors off camera) are just fine and dandy. And so it sure isn't surprising that notions like "she said no...but really meant yes" survive so strongly today.

As you can obviously tell by my review so far, I thought the film was offensive despite being generally well made. Technically, it's a good film...but a rather disturbing one that couldn't help but encourage at least SOME maniacs out there to internalize the message and see sexual assault as romantic. Plus the combination of kidnapping with sexually arousing scenes and full frontal nudity surely presents a VERY confusing message.

Technically, I'd give this one a 7. But the subject matter is so abhorrent and destructive, I still cannot suggest you watch it.

To reframe this story a bit. Think about some famous rape cases in recent years where rapists have abducted women and kept women prisoners for YEARS....is this also sexy or fun? Should they make films portraying these experiences as positive and enjoyable...or perhaps arousing?

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