A Mulher de Todos (1969) Poster

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8/10
a ferociously freak-headed fever dream no less quixotic-exotic than, Alejandro Jodorowsky or Dusan Makavejev.
Weirdling_Wolf27 April 2023
Any narratively uninhibited film that starts with a rotund uniformed man zealously French kissing a vast inflatable balloon, and randomly cutting to our hyper-exotic narrator strongly suggested the unfurling of skewed cinematic brilliance! Perky quixotic love vampire, Angela (Helena Ignez) is the uninhibitedly didactic nubile high priestess of nymphomania, Ultra-powerful number one enemy of men! Traversing an escalator, repeatedly kicking her swarthy beau in the shins, Angela ardently expressing her appreciation of ignorant men merely the tantalizing prelude to her many beguiling eccentricities!

The playful, erotically unbound, Angela is married to the obese, Doktor Plirtz (Jo Soares) part comic book villain, part megalomaniacal tycoon, part grandstanding, candy stuffing buffoon. Plirtz seemingly unaware that his luxuriously libidinous, cigar-chomping wife is a serially man-eating sex siren! Sinfully sojourning on the appropriately named Pleasure island, Angela triumphantly takes on, and blithely discards all the predictably lustful men that tickle her altogether delectable fancy, leaving them spent and dazed in her wickedly wanton wake!

The hyperbolic, dazzlingly epigrammatic, refreshingly non-conformist celluloid celebration of delicious anti-western demon, 'Angela of Flesh and Blood' is a uniquely energizing Godardian assault on the reeling senses! Its engagingly eclectic baroque pop/samba soundtrack galvanizes the film's luridly psychedelic 'do what thy wilt' sensibilities. Rogerio Sganzerla's exhilarating drunken delirium of riotous comic book kookiness, and lunatic lo-fi, proto-punk invention remains a ferociously freak-headed fever dream no less quixotic-exotic than comparable works by, Alejandro Jodorowsky or, Dusan Makavejev.
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6/10
Strange, but engaging
stevergy20002 April 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Angela is certainly a free spirit. Everyone she encounters she kisses and fondles. She has a husband, Doktor Plirtz, and testifies repeatedly that she loves him. However, this not prevent her from making out with at least three other men. A tip off for the finale of their relationship may have been given in Plirtz's repeated statements that he is 'narrow-minded'. Plirtz would seem to get his revenge for her infidelity with Armando by tying the two of them up by their hands and feet, then tying them together, and then attaching them to sail into the heavens with a balloon. This part is quite poorly enacted, with the camera merely being held upside down to capture Angela's frenzied screams as she is supposedly carried aloft. Throughout the film, another couple repeatedly go through a set routine: she asks him to order her a Cuba Libre while in refusing her request, the man beats her rather severely. David Clayton Thomas of Blood Sweat and Tears is heard on the soundtrack, as is, on at least two occasions,Presley's Jailhouse Rock. Another of Angela's lovers conducts a symphony orchestra playing on a record player in the jungle with wrists that he has slashed. It would seem that most if not all of Angela's dialogue and dance moves - she is frenetic in her movements at all times - was unscripted and just ad-libbed by the actress. Both she and her husband also have a serious love for thick cigars. Most of the scenes are shot near the ocean, on a beach, or by a in-ground pool. Quirky, interesting, and very, very a reflection of the sixties.
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9/10
A mulher de todos
RaulFerreiraZem11 April 2022
Incredible film. It looks very nouvelle vague-ish, is very funny and also quite smart. There are a few political commentarys throughout the runtime that i think most people who are not familiar with the AI 5 (ai 5 was an institutional act implemented by the fascist dictatorship in 1968) will not get since they are very subtle because if they werent the film would've gotten censored. One thing that i think is interesting to point is that it came out the same year that John Waters's "Multiple Maniacs" and it has kind of the same anarchic feel to it, only more political leaning. I like to speculate that perhaps if he had seen it it would've made a bigger impact on him than something like "vixen" or any other Russ Meyer film.
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9/10
"He's a bit intellectual but has value"
tobbyjesse14 March 2024
I read a review of this film where the person commented that they saw it drunk and I imagine that I should add it, huh? It's strange, but funny and smart. The Helena acting is so powerful and memorable, the soundtrack with her acts is really wonderful.

Sganzerla (the Director) once said that his films are anti-intellectual and seek Brazilianness above all else (or something like this), but he is a bit intellectual, and this fact he is even unconsciously involved in his work, he plays with language but knows what he is doing

Easily one of the best sleazy films, anyone who hasn't understood it until now will never understand it!
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