Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! (1990) Spain
Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! Image Cover
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Director:Pedro Almodovar
Studio:El Deseo S.A.
Producer:Agustín Almodóvar, Enrique Posner
Writer:Pedro Almodóvar
Rated:NR
Date Added:2012-11-15
UPC:0013131126792
Awards:7 wins & 18 nominations
Genre:Spanish films
Release:1990-04-12
IMDb:0101026
Duration:111
Aspect Ratio:1.85:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Languages:Spanish
Subtitles:English
LAC code:300011024
DVD or VHS:DVD
Original:original
Pedro Almodovar  ...  (Director)
Pedro Almodóvar  ...  (Writer)
 
Victoria Abril  ...  Marina Osorio
Antonio Banderas  ...  Ricky
Loles León  ...  Lola
Julieta Serrano  ...  Alma
María Barranco  ...  Médica
Rossy de Palma  ...  Camello en Vespa
Francisco Rabal  ...  Máximo Espejo
Lola Cardona  ...  Directora psiquiátrico
Montse G. Romeu  ...  Periodista
Emiliano Redondo  ...  Decorador
Oswaldo Delgado  ...  Fantasma
Concha Rabal  ...  Farmacéutica
Alberto Fernández  ...  Productor
José María Tasso  ...  Anciano psiquiátrico
Angelina Llongueras  ...  Montadora
Manuel Bandera  ...  Bailarín tango
Virginia Díez  ...  Bailarina tango
Juana Cordero  ...  Dependiente bombonería
Francisca Caballero  ...  Madre de Marina
Francisca Pajuelo  ...  Hija de Lola
Víctor Coyote  ...  Hermano de Lola
Carlos García Cambero  ...  Hermano de Lola
Alito Rodgers  ...  Man
Tamaki  ...  Camello
Malena Gracia  ...  Enfermera (as Almudena Gracia)
Agustín Almodóvar  ...  Farmacéutico
Rodolfo Montero  ...  Guarda jurado
Miguel García  ...  Gitano viejo
Pedro Losada  ...  Gitano joven
Summary: Perhaps only Pedro Almodóvar could come up with a story about a mental patient who stalks and kidnaps an ex-porn star--and turn it into a tender love story. But that's exactly what happens in "Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!", a lively installment from the Spanish director's wacky middle period (after the scruffy early films, and before his mature melodramas). Two of Almodóvar's sexiest stars, Antonio Banderas and Victoria Abril, play the leads: a cracked young man with dreams of bourgeois domesticity, and an actress who used to specialize in porno and heroin. Despite that fact that he binds her limbs with cord when he leaves the house, he always returns with a cheerful "I'm home!" For all Almodóvar's outrageousness, there's a touch of classical Hollywood in his construction. And while this movie is not for the politically correct, it does play by its own warped rules. "--Robert Horton"