
...
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
|
History as a subject for
movies intrigues filmmakers. There's all that opportunity for costumes, scenery, violence
and romance. Perhaps most popular are epic war stories and their heroes (Braveheart, Ride
with the Devil), but there's also a subgenre that specializes in royal courts and
their intrigues (Elizabeth, Mrs. Brown, Ridicule). Mad Love (a literally accurate retitling
that somehow sounds like a cheesy Hollywood romantic comedy) fits squarely in the royal
court tradition, focusing on the obsessive passion that Joan of Castile carried for her
husband, Philip the Handsome.
This Juana (Pilar Lopez de Ayala) was a daughter of Ferdinand and
Isabella (Susi Sanchez in a finely etched cameo), the monarchs who reigned over Castile
and Aragon in the latter half of the 15th century, well known for financing Christopher
Columbus, banishing the Jews, and supporting the Inquisition. Marriages amongst royalty in
those days were entirely a matter of political alliances; Juana was betrothed to Philip
(Daniele Liotti), who at the time of their marriage was the ruler of Burgundy and
Flanders.
According to the script of veteran writer/director Vicente Aranda, it
was passion at first sight. On their very first meeting at the court in Brussels, Philip
has a priest marry them instantly and whisks Juana off to bed. Their great mutual passion
is established and, surely as "ripper" follows "bodice," so follows
Philip's adulterous philandering and Juana's all-consuming jealousy. (Juana bore six
children, including a son who would be King Charles I and the Holy Roman Emperor, born, in
this scenario, in a royal toilet.)
As a result of a series of family deaths, when Queen Isabel herself
dies, Juana is heir to the throne of Castile. She and Philip return and she is well
received by her subjects. But both her passion and jealousy continue unabated, while
Philip and his father-in law, Ferdinand, plot to imprison Juana and take over the throne.
Before that is carried out, Philip dies, but, nonetheless Juana (at about 30) ends
up confined at the isolated fortress of Tordesillas for the rest of her life.
It's an intriguing and engrossing story and it's given first class
production values in Mad Love. In dark hues, the scenery is almost entirely
interiors of royal palaces; the costuming is lavish and elegant. Lopez is extraordinarily
beautiful and does all with this script that possibly could be done, portraying Juana's
extremes of emotion with intensity and conviction. Liotti has far less to do, but fulfills
the physical requirements of the role appropriately.
But Mad Love, for all the skill invested in its production,
falls short of great drama. It fills its nearly two hour length with incident, but it
fails to illuminate the central character of Juana beyond the central elements of her
passion, jealousy, and superstitious/religious beliefs. There isn't a single scene of her
interacting with her children or conducting the business of a monarch. The climactic scene
of Juana powerfully confronting Philip's power grab before the assembly of nobles has far
less resonance than it should because it is grounded in a characterization lacking both
depth and breadth. This is a portrait painted in too limited a palette; it's more
successful at relating history than in creating an emotionally complex, dramatically
satisfying heroine.
- Arthur Lazere