This is your chance to own a signed and personalized script book of Pedro Almodóvar film Parallel Mothers.
The ACLU SoCal’s June auction will celebrate items from artists, athletes, and content creators from the LGBTQ community as we celebrate Pride!
The book is in Spanish, and includes the script of the film, as well as photography, storyboard (exclusive material) and some notes by the filmmaker.
Parallel Mothers synopsis:
Two women, Janis and Ana, coincide in a hospital room where they are going to give birth. Both are single and became pregnant by accident. Janis, middle-aged, doesn’t regret it and she is exultant. The other, Ana, an adolescent, is scared, repentant and traumatized. Janis tries to encourage her while they move like sleepwalkers along the hospital corridors. The few words they exchange in these hours will create a very close link between the two, which by chance develops and complicates, and changes their lives in a decisive way.
Pedro Almodóvar was born in Calzada de Calatrava in the 50s. At seventeen, he moved to Madrid with a very specific project in mind: to study cinema and direct films. It was impossible to enrol in the Official Film School because Franco had just closed it. Despite the dictatorship that was suffocating the country, for an adolescent from the provinces Madrid represented culture, independence and freedom.
He worked at many sporadic jobs, but he couldn’t buy his first Super8 camera until he got a so-called serious job at the National Telephone Company of Spain. He worked there for twelve years. This job gave him an in-depth knowledge of the Spanish middle class at the start of the consumer era, with its dramas and its misfortunes, a real gold mine for a future storyteller. In his spare time, he wrote, loved, played theatre, collaborated with various underground magazines and wrote stories (some of which were even published!), was a member of the parody punk-rock group Almodóvar & McNamara and made films in Super-8. He had the good fortune that his personal explosion coincided with the birth of democracy in Spain. In Madrid, that particular period was known as La Movida.
After a year and a half of eventful shooting, he released Pepi, Luci, Bom in 1980. It was a no-budget film made as a cooperative effort with the crew and the cast. All of them were beginners, except for Carmen Maura.
In 1986, Pedro and Agustín Almodóvar founded the production company El Deseo. Their first project was Law of Desire. Since then, they have produced all of Pedro’s films, as well as some others by Alex de la Iglesia, Isabel Coixet, Lucrecia Martel, Damián Szifrón or Guillermo del Toro.
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