How Lucrecia Martel Almost Died Making Her Best Movie to Date indiewire.com/2017/11/lucrecia-martel-zama-interview-pedro-almodovar-1201899907 November 21, 2017
“Zama”
Lucrecia Martel needed Pedro Almódovar and nearly 30 other producers to help finish her sweeping period epic "Zama." Then she got sick. Sixteen years ago, Pedro Almódovar saw Argentine director Lucrecia Martel’s first narrative feature “La Ciénaga,” the story of teenagers in a bourgeois family driven to madness by their boredom. Almódovar immediately called his brother Agustin, with whom he runs a production company. “We absolutely had to contact the director to be part of her next movie,” Almódovar said by email. “It was an epiphany. When you discover an auteur so original, mature and elusive as Lucrecia Martel, you feel as if you’re witnessing a miracle.” In fact, there are many miraculous aspects to Martel’s career: She developed an aesthetic out of languid poetry, digging into the contradictions of modern Argentine identity with a near-experimental focus on characters who feel out of sync with their surroundings. She became an internationally revered filmmaker with only a few features to her name, and clung to that identity for nine long years, in between her 2008 feature “The Headless Woman” and this year’s “Zama.” Then there’s the not-so-insignificant part where she almost died before she could finish her latest project, and emerged on the other side with her best movie, more confident than ever.
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