Showing posts with label La Malquerida. Show all posts
Showing posts with label La Malquerida. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

TELENOVELA WATCH: Best & Worst of 2014

(This look back at the telenovelas of 2014 is US based, covering productions that aired at least half their episodes this calendar year on a US broadcast network.)

I did not see any great telenovelas broadcast in the US this year, but there were a number of decent ones. The return of Brazilian telenovelas to our network television was a welcome change after an absence of a few years and bolstered an otherwise mediocre year. While I don't think Lado a Lado or Avenida Brasil are great telenovelas, they are substantially better than the product reaching our screens out of Mexico, Colombia and Miami.

Lado a Lado is a Brazilian telenovela produced by Globo in 2012 that reached our screens this year thanks to MundoFox. It is the story of a profound friendship forged between two women of different backgrounds who dare to live their lives in ways that conflict with the misogynistic and racist society of Rio de Janeiro in the first decade of the twentieth century. Isabel, played by Camila Pitanga, is a black woman ostracized when she becomes pregnant with a lover's child while her fiancé is missing, unbeknownst to her, locked in jail. Laura, played by Marjorie Estiano, is the daughter of a conservative ex-baroness, played by Patrícia Pillar, who wishes to work outside the home rather than settle for the confining role of housewife her social class and mother demands of her, who later faces the additional stigma associated with divorce. The performances by Pitanga and Estiano are richly detailed and moving. Camila Pitanga has the beauty and aura that make her character's international stardom when she introduces the Paris art world to samba believable, and Estiano's cheerful hoyden is the warmest, most likable soul depicted in a telenovela in a long time.

As the friendship between the two women is the central relationship in the telenovela, their love interests, by necessity, take a secondary role. Only one of the love stories really works, the pairing between Estiano and Thiago Fragoso as her patient, sympathetic husband. The chemistry between Estiano and Fragoso is very strong and their relationship is richly developed. Rather less successful is the pairing between Pitanga and Lázaro Ramos, which after an initial dinner, skips ahead a year, meaning all of its development occurs off-screen. Ramos is an excellent actor, but he is saddled with a dull role as the white-hatted, virtuous hero.

Lado a Lado relies too heavily on conniving villains setting out to ruin the lives of the heroines, perfectly reasonable devices in most telenovelas, but clashing with the loftier ambitions of this telenovela. The stereotypical villains detract and distract from the telenovela's true conflict between the heroines and the racist and misogynistic society as a whole. Better is when a conflict stems from an otherwise moral character, such as when the kind French lady employing Isabel, who arranged for her to be wed in the same church deemed worthy by the ex-baroness for her daughter's wedding, fires her after discovering the baby she is carrying wasn't fathered by her fiancé.

Monday, September 15, 2014

TELENOVELA WATCH: 'Manual Para Ser Feliz' Final Week; Thoughts on 'Hasta El Fin Del Mundo' and 'La Malquerida'

Manual Para Ser Feliz (weekdays at 3 p.m. ET) is entering its final full week on MundoFox. This quirky and charming Colombian telenovela really grew on me. There is a shaggy dog quality to its characters, not just the misfits working in the office, but the leading lady fashion designer and her cousin and even the villains that I just found very appealing. It is a modest production that never seems to be reaching for its effects. There is very little plot and almost no actual jokes – the interest and humor comes in observing the little details in the characters’ lives and their day-to-day interactions with each other. In a telenovela format which deals almost exclusively in larger-than-life dramas, there is a cheeky perversity in how Manual Para Ser Feliz focuses on the small and mundane.


Hasta El Fin Del Mundo
There is an unfortunate déjà vu for telenovela watchers who keep abreast of international productions. The Mexican produced Hasta El Fin Del Mundo is the third version of this story I’ve encountered in a couple years after Dulce Amor, the Argentine original, and a current Chilean version called El Amor lo Manejo Yo. In the first few weeks, the two new versions are almost scene-for-scene retreads of the original.

For those coming to the story fresh, Hasta El Fin Del Mundo (weeknights at 9 p.m. ET on Univision) is a respectable version. It is similar in structure to another often produced Argentine telenovela, Amor en Custodia, which was most recently remade as Amores Verdaderos, only instead of a wealthy mother and daughter romancing their bodyguards, Dulce Amor and Hasta El Fin Del Mundo feature a pair of wealthy sisters falling for their chauffeurs.

Pedro Fernández is an atypical leading man. He is not believable as the neighborhood lothario and his acting is filled with too many ah-shucks mannerisms; but there is an earnestness and charm that helps sell the budding romance with the leading lady played by Marjorie de Sousa. He is a likable performer and the fact he isn't a run-of-the-mill telenovela dreamboat only means the producers, writers and actors have to work harder to build a convincing relationship between the protagonists based on something more substantial than the stereotypical telenovela instant romances attained by merely gazing into each other’s eyes.

Sunday, August 24, 2014

TELENOVELA WATCH: 'Qué Pobres Tan Ricos' Finale Tonight, 'La Malquerida' Premiere on Monday, Finale 'De Que Te Quiero, Te Quiero' Next Week

QUÉ POBRES TAN RICOS ends its US run tonight with a special Sunday finale starting at 8 p.m. ET on Univision. The rich/poor culture clash comedy comes limping to the finish line after seeing its ratings drop this final week, a rare occurrence for telenovelas. Even bad telenovelas typically see their ratings rise in their final weeks for obvious reasons - people want to see the resolutions. QUÉ POBRES TAN RICOS is not a bad telenovela, it is middle-of-the-road, but it has always suffered from a lack of story momentum, its plot lurches episodically with many minor desultory comedic subplots, and you never really feel much is at stake.

What I liked most in QUÉ POBRES TAN RICOS were a trio of double acts: Sylvia Pasquel and Diego de Erice, Mark Tacher and Tiaré Scanda (whose presence is very much missed in the final weeks), and Ingrid Martz and Raquel Pankowsky who are both ludicrously, cartoonishly over the top and I loved every second of them. The other performances I liked in this novela were from Manual “Flaco” Ibáñez, Zaide Silvia Gutiérrez, the young couple played by Jonathan Becerra and Natasha Dupeyrón, Arturo Peniche, Gabriela Zamora, Abril Rivera, and late arriver Cecilia Gabriela.


LA MALQUERIDA premieres
LA MALQUERIDA replaces QUÉ POBRES TAN RICOS on Univision’s schedule on Monday at 10 p.m. ET. This Mexican telenovela from Televisa produced by José Alberto Castro (LA QUE NO PODÍA AMAR; TERESA) is inspired by unusually lofty source material – a 1913 play of the same name by Nobel Prize-winning author Jacinto Benavente that also spawned a famous 1949 movie adaptation from Emilio Fernández.