Uma Vida Normal (1994) Poster

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7/10
Well...
Dockelektro23 January 2003
In the tradition of "Ao Fim da Noite", Joaquim Leitão gives us another attempt to free the portuguese cinema from the cinema d'auteur and to make it more appealing to the general public. I don't remember if it was a success or not, but it really tries to be a film that can be seen by a "normal" audience. The story is vaguely interesting, Joaquim de Almeida being the stressed out prototype, and achieving some comic value between women, cigarrettes and pills. Generally, it is quite watchable, with some good cinematography by Daniel del Negro and atmospheric music by António Emiliano. Interesting to see how the DVD spruced it up, I only knew this movie from the TV broadcasts, which had some really bad sound. Maybe one day they release "Ao Fim da Noite" in such an edition, it deserved it.
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6/10
What does that mean?
valadas3 November 2002
What is a normal life nowadays? To be an honest law abiding citizen, living with his wife and kids, in a monogamous way and loving, protecting and supporting them? Or let himself be caught in the whirlwind of pleasure, respecting neither values or principles? In this movie a man in the space of 2 or 3 days is expelled of his home by a wife fed up with his infidelities, taken into a frustrated sadomasochistic session by his girlfriend, forced to witness the attempted suicide of his charming neighbor to whom he had revealed himself impotent in bed the night before and finds himself involved in a street fight after a failed attempt of reconciliation with his wife. And in the meantime he's supposed to plan 3 advertising campaigns for his boss in order to be able to go on holidays afterwards. The narrative process consists in the protagonist of all this sitting at a bar counter and telling the barman, his confident, everything that is happening to him and that we can see or course. To end it up he is also bankrupt and resort to hand on bounced cheques to the above mentioned barman for a value higher than the expenses receiving money in exchange. So this story is an ordinary one and the fact that many people live like that nowadays justifies the title (A Normal Life). It's no masterpiece but can be seen for lack of something better.
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Poor pressed guy's midlife crisis at 40
shu-fen4 April 2004
My very first Portuguese movie. I was disappointed after watching it because it tells me nothing, not even a story. Later I find that it's a substantial tragicomedy about a day of a distressed and broke 40-year-old man who has heart-attack alarm and does not know what to do with his career as a copywriter in an advertising agency, (he is trying to write a slogan for an insurance company but his mind is "constipated"). It's all because of the title of the movie "Uma Vida Normal" that I find the movie agreeable. Normal, ordinary life of a stressed working man in an urban city named Lisbon, it's a faithful presentation.

Extremely bad days of poor Miguel Martins who has a blocked mind that gives no out-put and a row with a co-worker in the office. His half-dressed ex-wife is quarrelling with her present boy-friend when he visits her and the encounter is resulted in an even hotter quarrel between the two men. His present girl-friend demands too much sex-play from him, she ties his hands and legs on the bed posts and threatens to amputate his genital with an electric saw. Finally, he cannot but pay a prostitute he meets in a bar when heavily drinking and smoking there. She comes to his rescue, he needs no sex and at last he can write something wonderful and new while the hooker is sleeping.

People may find Joaquim De Almeida's face familiar but not his news because he is more popular in Spanish and Portuguese speaking worlds. Hollywood is still the big brother of world movie industry. It defines all Spanish or Portuguese speaking people from Latin America as killer, drug-dealers and sex lunatic, so you can see this fine actor De Almeida playing all these roles in Hollywood movies, just unfair. I think his native Portugal does him more justice. About the director Joaquim Leitão, he is a well-respected film-maker in Portugal who has brought along a new scenario into the local movie scene.

Picture that, an actor who speaks Portuguese, Spanish, German, Italian, English, French (and one more unknown) all fluently, you can never tell where he's going to work for the next project, De Almeida works across both Americas and Europe extensively. How I envy his language flair, I want to speak (+ write of course) seven language impeccably too.
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