Her name is Mina, but she is called Bambola (doll). Upon the death of her mother, she and her homosexual brother, Flavio, open a pizzeria. A man named Ugo loans Bambola the money, but is then killed in a fight with another one of her boyfriends, Settimio. While visiting Settimio in jail, she meets a sadistic man named Furio, and they begin a relationship. –IMDb
Juan José Bigas Luna (Barcelona, March 19, 1946) is a Spanish film director. He began his professional career in the design world, creating the Estudio Gris with Carlos Riart in 1969. In his earlier exhibitions, at the beginning of the sixties, he showed a great interest in conceptual art and the emerging visual technologies. Esteemed as an atypical director in the Spanish cinema, in 1986 he retired to Tarragona in order to devote his time to painting. In 1990 the producer Andrés Vicente Gómez persuaded him to return to cinema and entrusted to him the direction of Las edades de Lulú, a film which reached the general public. Without abandoning his dedication to painting and photography, reflected in numerous exhibitions, he began the well-known Trilogía Ibérica with Jamón Jamón (1992), Huevos de Oro (1993) and La teta y la luna (1994). Subsequently, with the short film for internet Collar de Moscas (2001), he revived his interest in avant… read more
Severo patinon con partida de hocico por parte de Bigas Luna despues del buen sabor de boca dejado por cosas como Jamòn, jamòn ò La Recamarera del Titanic. Un animo de provocaciòn totalmente gratuito hace que el producto final resulte tan aguado como las carnes de la protagonista, mientras Jorge Perugorria intenta hacer creible un papel totalmente diferente al que desarrollò en Fresa y chocolate, quedando la impresiòn de que, la verdad, le queda mejor hacerla de puto que de malote.
Bámbola lives with her gay brother Flavio and her insane and gun toting’ mother (Played by Anita Ekberg) in a small Italian village. When her mother suddenly dies Bámbola decides to leave for the city… read review