Product Details
The Ages Of Lulu [1990]

The Ages Of Lulu [1990]
Directed by Bigas Luna

List Price: £19.99
Price: £15.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £15. Details

Availability: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

3 new or used available from £14.00

Average customer review:

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #23222 in DVD
  • Released on: 2002-12-16
  • Rating: Suitable for 18 years and over
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Formats: Anamorphic, PAL, Widescreen
  • Original language: Spanish
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 99 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
The Ages of Lulu is a gruelling sexual odyssey from Spanish director Bigas Luna, made immediately prior to his popular trilogy Jamón, jamón (1992), Golden Balls (1993) and The Tit and the Moon (1994). Starting as the somewhat queasy story of the young Lulu's affair with the manipulative Pablo (Oscar Ladoire), the movie takes a much darker turn once they are wed. It is conventional cinematic wisdom that there's no such thing as sex after marriage, but here Lulu's husband incomprehensibly leads her into blindfolded incest, then is heartbroken when she reacts with disgust.

Soon Lulu (superbly played by Francesca Neri from ingénue to hardened 30-something), is paying gay men for group sex, eventually becoming an unwilling attraction in a commercial sado-machochistic orgy. The closest most UK audiences will have come to this before is in Ken Russell's The Devils (1971) and Crimes of Passion (1984), and it is surely one of the most gut-churningly nightmarish scenes ever passed for home viewing. While Ages of Lulu may function as a reactionary warning against the wilder shores of sex, Luna's intention remains unsatisfyingly enigmatic, since the script is under-written and psychologically unconvincing. The end result is pretentious, repellent pornography which degrades human beings of any sexual persuasion.

On the DVD: The Ages of Lulu is transferred at an anamorphically enhanced 1.78:1 and image quality is very good, though in some scenes very slightly soft. The film can be watched with or without English subtitles, and the sound is unremarkable stereo. The main extras are a seven-page essay on Bigas Luna and five pages detailing the now restored 110 seconds of cuts made to the 1998 video release. The main title still contains 65 seconds of alternate footage to the cinema original for legal reasons. Also included are filmographies of Lunas and Oscar Ladoire, two trailers plus trailers for six other films. --Gary S Dalkin

Special Features
Anamorphic Wide Screen
DVD 5
Spanish
Region 0
Dolby Digital Spanish
Dolby Digital
Star And Director Filmographies
Scene Selection
Billy Chainsaw Film Notes
Ages Of Lulu At The BBFC
Tartan Video Trailer Reel
English

Synopsis
An exploration of sexual obsession and perversion that sees a young woman pushed to the very limits of sexual desire when she marries the man who took her virginity who has returned from overseas. Soon their passion takes on a dangerous new angle.


Customer Reviews

Titilation!!!4
Super film, the scene with the scissors as depicted on the front cover saves me any effort at foreplay. Just need to know when to stop fast forwarding.

disappointing!1
sorry for mistakes, I'm no native speaker...
"Lulu" from Almudena Grandes is one of the best erotic novels with a sadomasochistic topic. You find detailed, empathic, erotic and sensibly written moments of love and/or destruction. The film nevertheless is boring, superficial, sometimes tries to provocate, sometimes it works, maybe. It is not a NICE story, but it is quite a INTENSIVE story, but the film only floats along with no psychologic work. Depressing. Read the book.

AN EXPLORATION OF THE DARKER SIDE OF SEX4
It is difficult to know whether Bigas Luna is an unreconstructed celebrator of machismo, or a sly critic of it. In Jamon Jamon, the hero's tragedy is linked to his phallic power, but so is much of the film's energy and pleasure. In Golden Balls, the hero is plainly subject to critique, but the treatment of women is frequently exploitative.

The Ages Of Lulu differs from these hits in having a woman as protagonist. One of the interests of the film is in the way the viewer is never sure what direction it is going to take. It begins with the lightest of touches, and ends in dark tragedy. On one level, it is a rite-of-passage story (the crucial early scenes are soundtracked to pastiche early rock'n'roll), as we follow the growth to maturity of a naive young girl, from the object of male fantasy, to a woman who recognises her own desire, and knows how to satisfy it; from someone who must tell stories to arouse her lovers, to someone who narrates her own self-defining story.

Lulu's greater independence, however, is treated with solemnity and fear by the film, which is also a rigorous exploration of sexuality as site of character, identity, gender role-play, philosophy and politics (almost a comic Ai No Corrida, although this terror of female transgression recalls Lulu's famous namesakes in Wedekind, Pabst and Berg). However, the admirable realism and nervous pleasurability of the early sex scenes become dark, demonised and dangerous the more freedom Lulu gains. The final nightmare orgy brings Lulu to her senses, and back to her selfish wimpy man. Her consistently marginalised transvestite friend is sacrificed so that heterosexuality can reassert itself.

The irony of this film is not as apparent as it is in Luna's more famous films, and Spanish audiences might be more alert to the contemporary resonances than I am. Phalluses abound in this still strongly patriarchal culture. There is none of the verve, colour and melodramatic swagger of Jamon Jamon in Luna's direction here, which is detached, yet prurient. The film shares many of the same features as an 80s Almodovar movie, but without the extravagant formal means of ironising the material. The story begins to get monotonous when the finger begins to wag. There isn't much opportunity for good acting: Neri is much better in Live Flesh, though she ages convincingly here.