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SYNOPSIS
An isolated spot in the middle of the sea. An oil rig, where all the workers are men, on which there has been an accident. A solitary, mysterious woman who is trying to forget her past (Sarah Polley) is brought to the rig to look after a man (Tim Robbins) who has been temporarily blinded. A strange intimacy develops between them, a link full of secrets, truths, lies, humour and pain, from which neither of them will emerge unscathed and which will change their lives forever. A film about the weight of the past. About the sudden silence that is produced before a storm. About twenty-five million waves, a Spanish cook (Javier Cámara) and a goose. And, above all else, about the power of love even in the most terrible circumstances.
--© Official Site
Some Notes by Isabel Coixet (director)
THE SECRET LIFE
Someone said that from the moment you have an inner life, you are already leading a double life.
Words –like shoals of fish- team around in our heads and crowd against our vocal chords, fighting to get out and be listened to by others. And sometimes they get lost on the journey from head to throat. This film is about those lost words that wander for a long time in a limbo of silence (and misunderstandings and errors and past and pain) and then one day come pouring out, and once they start nothing can stop them.
THE SILENCE OF WORDS
Hanna (Sarah Polley) lives in the silence that her deafness imposes on her, although very often it seems that silence is the only weapon she has to defend herself from the world. Josef (Tim Robbins) talks as if it is only through words –and irony and jokes and humour- that he can avoid going completely mad.
The encounter between them, the inevitable physical link that is established between a nurse and the patient she is caring for, will show them the other face of the reality in which both are immersed. The empathy, that mysterious ability to feel the other person’s dilemmas, whatever they may be, as your own, that they manage to develop will break down all the walls –of silence, of cynicism- that there are between them.
theoptimist said:The last film I saw was The Pianist, I thought it was amazing! As awful as the situation was his survival was uplifting and remarkable, has anyone else seen this?