Pepa
Carmen Maura
Pepa

“A comedy about someone you know.”
After being dumped by her lover, Pepa finds her life and the lives of those around her spiraling out of control in a deliciously chaotic series of events.
Original Trailer Official
Pepa
Carmen Maura
Pepa
Carlos
Antonio Banderas
Carlos
Lucía
Julieta Serrano
Lucía
Candela
María Barranco
Candela
Marisa
Rossy de Palma
Marisa
Paulina Morales
Kiti Mánver
Paulina Morales
Taxi Driver
Guillermo Montesinos
Taxi Driver
Jehovah's Witness Goalkeeper
Chus Lampreave
Jehovah's Witness Goalkeeper
Lucía's Father
Eduardo Calvo
Lucía's Father
Secretary
Loles León
Secretary
Police I
Ángel de Andrés López
Police I
Iván
Fernando Guillén
Iván
"I was a virgin this morning, but I'm not sure now...". Well after ninety minutes of these shenanigans, I'm surprised she was even certain about the morning. The story follows actress "Pepa" (Carmen Maura) who is despondent after being left by boyfriend "Iván" (Fernando Guillén). Determined to find out why, and pregnant, she contacts his former wife "Lucia" (Julieta Serrano), herself fresh from a lengthy stint in a sanatorium and living with her rather geeky looking twenty-something son "Carlos" (Antonio Banderas) but they can't really shed much light on his behaviour either. Whilst all this is going on, a group of terrorists is believed to have carried out an atrocity in Madrid and it might be that her best friend "Candela" (Marisa Barranco) could be mixed up as she had them stay in her apartment for an evening of furious jogging - so now she's in hiding. With the media and the cops on the trail of the killers, Pedro Almodóvar now crams enough slapstick comedy into this to rival anything Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau ever did. There's nothing nor anybody left out - even a bleach blond gay guy and some ridiculous high heeled antics to keep the pace rocketing along til a denouement that closes the story, but that hardly matters. This is about the characters and both Maura and and Barranco are on entertaining form delivering a pithy and humorous script as the plot lurches from the daft to the dafter. Well worth a watch this.
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