Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Techniques: Wardrobe
- Pepa
- Changes Often
- Reflecting her emotional journey
- Through any event/disaster
- Wears RED frequently
- During times of control/significant power
- Represents passion & anger
- Wears BLUE in the lawyer scene
- Lack/loss of control
- Candela: "Why are you so dressed up?"
- Wears PINK at the beginning
- Vulnerability
- Paulina Morales
- Wears clothes that reflect the power she wants to have
- Shoulder pads: considered masculine
- "Feminist lawyer" - wants dominance
- Wears RED in the scene with Pepa: shows control
- Candela
- Beginning: wears BLUE & white
- Shows her carefree, naïve nature/attitude towards men & sex
- Submissive nature
- After suicide attempt: Pepa "hay que sufrir y mucho"
- Pepa saved her from her insanity (links with the Title)
- Doesn't change internally but her appearance does
- End: Better dressed to deal with events regarding the terrorists
- Wears BLACK, no jewellery & slicks back hair
- Most incapable character yet most scantily dressed
- Notably most sexually available
- Coffee earrings
- Lucía
- Trapped in the past
- Emotionally
- Mentally
- Reflected through her clothes
- 60's clothing: effective symbol of her insanity
- Out-dated wigs, make-up (eyeliner) etc.
- Outlandish by the end
- Beyond the border of a nervous breakdown
- Anchored in a time before Iván's disloyal behaviour
- El Mambo Taxista
- Most eccentrically dressed
- Printed & colourful clothes
- Representation of post-franco men & therefore the ideal man
- Showing Almodóvar isn't a 'feminist'
- Men in a positive light
- Revolutionary in his ideas/approach towards women
- La Movida
- Carlos
- Like father, wears suits
- Suits dont' fit: hasn't fully become the womaniser that his father is
- Bland colours