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William Hurt, Raul Julia, Sonia Braga, José Lewgoy, Nuno Leal Maia ... see more see more... , Antonio Petrim , Milton Gonçalves , Patricio Bisso , Herson Capri , Denise Dummont , Wilson Grey , Nildo Parente , Míriam Pires , Fernando Torres , Oswaldo Barreto , Walmir Barros , Elvira Bisso , Frederico Botelho , Ana Maria Braga , Walter Breda , Sergio Bright , Pericles Campos , Benjamin Cattan , Claudio Curi , Lineu Dias , Miguel Falabella , Carlos Fariello , Luis Roberto Galizia , Luis Guilherme , Kenichi Kaneko , Joe Kantor , Paulo Ludmer , Edmilson Santos , Georges Schlesinger , Luis Serra , Sylvio Band , Walter Vicca

Political prisoner Valentin Arregui (Raul Julia) and homosexual pederast Luis Molina (William Hurt) share a Brazilian prison cell in this fantastical drama from the book by Manuel Puig. Sensitive and ... read more read more...flamboyant, Molina helps pass the time by recounting memories from one of his favorite films, a wartime romantic thriller that just may also be a Nazi propaganda film. He weaves the characters into an ongoing narrative meant to spur Valentin's imagination and distract him from the brutal realities of political imprisonment and separation from the woman he loves. Hard around the edges, and willing to die for his political principles, Valentin nonetheless allows Molina to penetrate some of his defensive shell. An odd friendship forms between the two vastly different prisoners, the dreamer and the activist. As the narrative unfolds, it becomes clear that Valentin is being poisoned by his captors, to compel him to reveal names and secrets, and that Molina may have other agendas that belie his honesty and openness with Valentin. The intense character study builds toward a surprising conclusion. Kiss of the Spider Woman received Oscar nominations for best picture, best director and best adapted screenplay, and Hurt took home the best actor trophy for his portrayal of the soulful and conflicted Molina. The film was later adapted into a Broadway musical. ~ Derek Armstrong, Rovi

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24 critics

R, 1 hr. 59 min.

Directed by: Hector Babenco

Release Date: August 1, 1985

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DVD Release Date: October 21, 2008

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Flixster Reviews (345)


  • May 15, 2012
    An inner look into the South American penal system, and the role of political prisoners amongst the fray of the prison in general, Kiss of a Spider Woman is either identifying the wrongs of an entire country's political system or focusing on the imaginary and wonderful. Two convi... read morected men share a cell, one wrongfully accused of crimes that have left them forgotten and wronged alongside a statutory rapist. Most of the film carries on between the two of them, as one of the cellmates is a political prisoner who watches daily as his comrades are tortured for information about the resistance and the other is a drag queen who wishes vehemently to be a woman and finally be loved. As we watch the political prisoner (Julia) take out his fury on everyone, including the drag queen (Hurt) it becomes clear that this isn't altogether about the political climate in Brazil, or the loss in that country as well as the infuriating lack of upholding human rights. All during the film, Luis Molina (Hurt) tells a story about a Nazi propaganda film he once saw, that was a romance about a French spy nightclub singer who falls in love with a Nazi officer, which is a story that seamlessly revolves around the existing storyline of Molina and Arregui (Julia). As it all unfolds the friendship between the two troubled souls becomes tender and loving, and they actually care for one another, eventually leading to the same sacrifices and acts of kindness in the movie Molina recounts. The fact that they do parallel each other is what makes the film beautiful and poignant, giving life and romance to a love story that can't be classified as such unless you see the same similarities between them. Though the film is a clear commentary on the Brazilian government and the wartime implications of its tactics to manipulate political prisoners, it's also a love story, a story of friendship and trust, and giving yourself over to a cause to change the ways of the world, lest you be eaten alive otherwise. It's really very moving and graceful, even if slow and without a flair, and having an inert style.
  • October 2, 2011
    We tend to think of prison dramas as grimly realistic affairs, as typified by Cool Hand Luke, Midnight Express and Escape from Alcatraz. But there are several examples of prison dramas which have blended the harsh realities of life behind bars with elements of the fantastical or ... read morespiritual, to create something a lot more uplifting. Nine years before The Shawshank Redemption set the bar very high, Kiss of the Spider Woman was plumbing the same territory.

    Although it is at the more fanciful end of the spectrum, Kiss of the Spider Woman deserves initial credit for the amount of claustrophobic tension it manages to generate. Most of the action takes place within the four walls of a prison cell, with only occasional cutaways to the prison corridors or the outside world. Hector Babenco shoots Luis and Valentin's living quarters from every possible angle to make us feel hemmed in, and his cinematographer Rodolfo Sanchez completes the effect with poetic, bittersweet lighting. The pale matt colours, stained walls and rain backlit with blue light reinforced the degraded nature of the characters, achieving a similar effect that Alan Parker managed on Birdy or Angel Heart.

    Because the film has very few locations or changes in scenery, there is a danger that things could quickly become stagey, something which is reinforced by the source material. Manuel Puig's novel, which later became a play and a Broadway musical, is an often uneasy blend of realism and melodrama which would lend a somewhat histrionic quality to any film version. It is testament to Babenco's skill as a director that he is able to have two often outrageous characters sharing the screen without things ever going over-the-top. If William Hurt was just a little more camp, or Raul Julia just' a little more fiery, then it would feel stagey. But Babenco tells us a lot by showing us relatively little, just he would later do on Ironweed.

    Kiss of the Spider Woman's main theme is the conflict between escapism and reality, and to what extent the former can help us understand or tolerate the latter. There is a contrast between Luis' love of old movies and fantasy with the iron will of Valentin, who regards films as bourgeois and a distraction from the concrete goals of his revolutionary beliefs. While Luis revels in the mystique of old Hollywood, remarking that he always wanted to play the heroine, Valentin likens the whole experience to "jerking off" and remarks that "you wouldn't know reality if it stuck a spike up your ass!"

    Having drawn the battle lines quite clearly, it gradually emerges that Valentin is not as ascetic as he would have us believe. For all his talk of political principles, what really sustains him through his time in prison is the memory of a woman he loved. More specifically, it is a case of forbidden love: the woman in question, called Marta, comes from a privileged background. In a flashback we see him having to choose between the only person his heart desires and the political struggle to which he has committed himself. Knowing full well he can never have her, he escapes into the few happy memories he has of her, and the film ends with him imagining their reunion.

    The story of Luis' movie comes to mirror their circumstances in the cell, a further indication of the role of escapism in dealing with reality. The glamorous and frightened cabaret singer is Luis, who 'falls in love' with the enemy (the governors of the prison) to betray his countryman and equal (Valentin). This is a device found throughout Puig's work: Betrayed by Rita Hayworth explores the validity of Hollywood movies as a guide to living a life ungoverned by church or state, while Eternal Curse on the Reader of These Pages find two men re-enacting melodramatic scenes to find each other's identity.

    The melodramatic nature of the story reflects both Luis' character traits and, more sinisterly, his intentions towards Valentin. At the beginning we believe that it's all escapist nonsense, too preposterous to require much attention, let alone get angry about. When the accusations come about the film being Nazi propaganda, we brush them off initially as empty rhetoric, but soon the parallels become clearer and we begin to think again.

    In the latter stages of the story, when Luis is trying to get Valentin to talk, the film becomes a means of leading him to reveal secrets. We question whether Luis has been genuine at all, or whether his desire to escape was far more literal. It's an interesting device to get us thinking about the way that film blends and confuses reality and fiction, and how people can be manipulated by little more than clever storytelling - something expertly practised by Goebbels and his followers.

    With this plot development, Kiss of the Spider Woman becomes a film about betrayal and the dynamics of exploitation. Luis turns out to be working for the prison governor, whose government wants to expose and arrest the extremists that Valentin is helping. But the dynamic between them is still not straightforward. On the one hand, Luis admits that he has fallen in love with Valentin, and therefore cannot bring himself to betray him (although, of course, he doesn't say this out loud). On the other hand, Luis is tired of being manipulated by the people around him, and promises Valentin that if he is released, he will be his own man. His death is ironic, since he is unable to make this move or to choose between two masters.

    The film also explores sexuality, specifically in Valentin's attitude to Luis' homosexuality. In the first act, Valentin is incredibly hostile, calling Luis a "faggot" at every possible moment. In one scene, he pulls Luis' legs apart and lets forth a blistering tirade about how he would still be a men even he had the guts to cut off his genitals. But as the film moves on, and Luis opens up to Valentin with several acts of kindness, a level of respect grows between the men until the issue of sexuality no longer seems an issue. The film's treatment of sexuality is arguably more shallow than Puig's novel, but it does at least get its sexual politics right without looking like it is consciously trying to do so.

    The two central performances in Kiss of the Spider Woman are both of a high calibre. Raul Julia is the more understated of the two, but he is a fiery and compelling screen presence, and we believe in his character right from the beginning. With William Hurt, it takes a little more time. When we first meet him, he is swanning around in a turban and dressing down, looking like David Bowie in his video for 'Blue Jean'. But though his character is undoubtedly effeminate, this is not a clichéd Hollywood gay performance, all mincing and hinged wrists. Hurt is very convincing, and in the latter stages takes on a Ralph Fiennes quality: the sunken-in eyes and slicked-back hair are reminiscent of Fiennes' performance in The English Patient.

    All that is good and bad about Kiss of the Spider Woman can be found in its recreation of Hollywood movies. Babenco carefully recreates the sepia visuals and big-gestured acting styles, resisting the temptation to be arch and snigger at them under his breath. But while he never falls into the traps that Peter Bogdanovich did in At Long Last Love, he ends up being so overtly affectionate that we are the ones who end up sniggering. One cannot help laughing at the club-footed resistance member cornering the cabaret singer whilst holding a dog, because it's played so assuredly straight that it becomes absurd.

    There are other flaws as well. The film reveals its main development (i.e. Luis' betrayal) far too readily, and after this one little detail the film starts to unravel. Once the action moves to outside the prison, a lot of the tension goes with it, like lifting the lid off a prison cooker. Because things are running out of steam so markedly, the film tries to recapture that tension with a shootout, a move which partially succeeds but also smacks of desperation. In its actual ending, involving Valentin slipping into a fantasy involving his lost lover, the film falls into the trap of confusing the movie version of love with the true love the characters experienced. It opts for pure escapism over anything more emotionally rewarding.

    Kiss of the Spider Woman is an engrossing and intense prison drama, undone only by its melodramatic moments and rambling ending. The central performances are believable and compelling, and Babenco's direction does justice to Puig's novel by achieving a decent balance between the gritty and theatrical. It's not Babenco's finest work, and in the grand scheme of prison dramas it has long since been eclipsed by The Shawshank Redemption. But the film has lost very little of its emotional power, and still makes for intriguing viewing.
  • January 20, 2011
    A lot of the prison scenes were kinda boring or hard to watch. The actors are good, though, Raul Julia is especially good in this movie. Overall it's pretty good, but it could be better.
  • January 19, 2011
    This film was the first independant film to receive the top four oscar nominations,including, best picture and best director.........Starring William Hurt as Luis Molina,and Raul Julia as Valtentin Arregui,it tells about two very different men who are cell mates in a latin americ... read morean prison,who both have quite different views on life.so,to escape reality,Luis invents romantic movies
    while Valentin tries to keep his mind on the situation he's in,but during the time they spend together, the two men come to understand and respect one another.
  • June 23, 2010
    "Is this propaganda or porno?"
    That made me laugh.
    This movie was not that bad. But I wouldn't watch it again. It was kinda boring.
  • December 17, 2008
    Saw thiso nVHS many years ago and remember it being a very powerful film, with an amazing cast.
  • September 5, 2008
    So so gorgeous. Impressed with the minimalist presentation and the sustainable dialogue between only two people in a jail cell. William Hurt is actually quite excellent in this performance.
  • April 6, 2008
    A wonderful, heartbreaking movie. I bought this on video as a pretentious mid-teenager and I still love it as a pretentious thirtysomething. Perhaps not the greatest prison movie ever made but surely the most moving. William Hurt and Raul Julia are simply magnificent as polar opp... read moreosites who strike up an unlikely friendship in a Latin American prison cell: the former a homosexual caught soliciting a minor, the latter an angry and torture-weary political prisoner. The final scene, which plays out as the credits roll, is so beautiful, yet bittersweet because we know the escape from pain is both illusory and only temporary.
  • September 18, 2011
    It's the performances that do the job here.
  • fb20312798
    March 8, 2009
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    A tremendously unique film with great performances. Hector Babenco is able to make the difference between reality and fantasy to be the same as the difference between life and death for these characters. A lot of directors would have made the material more overtly political or tr... read morey to comment on society when the story isn't about any of those things. I also think it would have been easy to make William Hurt's performance over the top, but it stays in the realm of believable.

Critic Reviews


Matthew Sorrento
November 20, 2008
Matthew Sorrento, PopMatters

Babenco's film blends ideology with drama and betrayal for a tale as intellectually rewarding as it is passionate. Full Review

Jeremiah Kipp
August 14, 2008
Jeremiah Kipp, Slant Magazine

Argentine writer Manuel Puig's book Kiss of the Spider Woman has a theme that endures throughout all its various incarnations: that of human dignity and compassion surviving within a society that deni... Full Review

Peter Canavese
August 11, 2008
Peter Canavese, Groucho Reviews

Explores the rapture and torture of desire, and the tension between harsh reality and escapist fantasy. [DVD] Full Review

Emanuel Levy
October 22, 2007
Emanuel Levy, EmanuelLevy.Com

Centering on the camaraderie in prison between gay window-dresser and Marxist radical, the film is schematic, and the recreations of old movie scenes are uneven, but the acting is good. Full Review

Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat
August 22, 2004
Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat, Spirituality and Practice

Bold and touching performances by William Hurt and Raul Julia. Full Review

Alex Sandell
November 22, 2002
Alex Sandell, Juicy Cerebellum

Sorry, but this was boring and poorly executed.

Jeffrey M. Anderson
July 27, 2001
Jeffrey M. Anderson, Combustible Celluloid

Succeeds beyond all the trappings it sets up for itself and becomes an accomplished picture as a result. Full Review

March 16, 2009
Variety

Click to read the article Full Review

Janet Maslin
May 20, 2003
Janet Maslin, New York Times

Click to read the article Full Review

Bob Graham
August 1, 2001
Bob Graham, San Francisco Chronicle

Click to read the article Full Review

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Kiss of the Spider Woman Trivia


  • For what film did William Hurt win his Oscar for Best Actor in?  Answer »
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