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Brilliant colors that bring Frida Kahlo's Mexico
City to vibrant life combine with a captivating performance by Salma
Hayek to make director Julie Taymor's FRIDA a fascinating film.
Starting and ending with Frida on her deathbed, the film spans the
famous painter's life from her teenage years to her death at the
young age of 47.
From start to finish, Frida is portrayed as a relentlessly energized,
self-righteous, headstrong, asserted woman. She had liberal views
and a socialist political stance. She was bisexual and promiscuous.
She drank and abused painkillers, sang and danced, and fearlessly
poured her pain and beauty into her paintings.
At the age of 18, Frida was horribly injured in a bus accident.
Though she learned to walk again, she lived her life in physical
agony, enduring multiple surgeries, and eventually needing a wheelchair.
Yet her condition did not stop her from having an exciting, tumultuous
life as the wife of famed artist and womanizer Diego Rivera, who
mentored her in her own work and encouraged her passions.
While Frida's life is the main focus, her work is always present
and the action of the film often fades into paintings and vice versa.
However, the film only hints at the recognition and worldwide display
that her painting received after her death.
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"One of the most
powerful biographical drama in years" - NBC TV
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