MOVIE REVIEW

Javier Bardem Delivers the Goods in The Dancer Upstairs

“So I want you to be my tomcat, Rejas.”

Ed Newman
3 min readMar 19, 2020

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Photo by Andrés Gómez on Unsplash

My introduction to Javier Bardem came via the Coen Brothers’ No Country For Old Men. His portrayal of Anton Chiguhr, the villain he brought to life on the silver screen, was more than memorable. It also won him a well-deserved Oscar as Best Supporting Actor.

Public domain.

I quickly searched for more of his films and found several, the first being this one, The Dancer Upstairs, which also happened to be John Malkovich’s directorial film debut. (He’d previously directed plays with Chicago’s distinguished Steppenwolf Theater Company.)

Bardem plays the role of a police detective who has been tasked with the capture of an anarchist leader by the name of “Ezequiel” in a nameless Latin American country. The film itself is based on a novel about the capture of the leader of Peru’s Shining Path revolutionaries. The film’s focus, however, is on the very human struggle of Bardem, who must do the right thing despite personal frustrations both in his personal life and with the way his country is being run.

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Ed Newman
Ed Newman

Written by Ed Newman

An avid reader who writes about arts, culture, literature & other life obsessions. @ennyman3 Look for my books on Amazon https://tinyurl.com/y3l9sfpj

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