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Dark Habits

Original title: Entre tinieblas
  • 1983
  • 15
  • 1h 54m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
8.9K
YOUR RATING
Dark Habits (1983)
Watch Tráiler [VO]
Play trailer0:59
1 Video
89 Photos
SatireComedyDrama

A nightclub singer seeks refuge with gay nuns on dope in a Madrid convent.A nightclub singer seeks refuge with gay nuns on dope in a Madrid convent.A nightclub singer seeks refuge with gay nuns on dope in a Madrid convent.

  • Director
    • Pedro Almodóvar
  • Writer
    • Pedro Almodóvar
  • Stars
    • Cristina Sánchez Pascual
    • Will More
    • Laura Cepeda
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    8.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Pedro Almodóvar
    • Writer
      • Pedro Almodóvar
    • Stars
      • Cristina Sánchez Pascual
      • Will More
      • Laura Cepeda
    • 25User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Tráiler [VO]
    Trailer 0:59
    Tráiler [VO]

    Photos89

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    Top cast31

    Edit
    Cristina Sánchez Pascual
    Cristina Sánchez Pascual
    • Yolanda
    • (as Cristina S. Pascual)
    Will More
    Will More
    • Jorge
    • (as Willmore)
    Laura Cepeda
    Laura Cepeda
    • Lina
    Miguel Zúñiga
    • Madero
    • (as Miguel Zuñiga)
    Julieta Serrano
    Julieta Serrano
    • Superiora
    Marisa Paredes
    Marisa Paredes
    • Sor Estiercol
    Mary Carrillo
    Mary Carrillo
    • Marquesa
    • (as Mari Carrillo)
    Carmen Maura
    Carmen Maura
    • Sor Perdida
    Lina Canalejas
    Lina Canalejas
    • Sor Víbora
    Manuel Zarzo
    Manuel Zarzo
    • Capellán
    Chus Lampreave
    Chus Lampreave
    • Sor Rata
    Marisa Tejada
    • Lola
    Eva Siva
    • Antonia
    Cecilia Roth
    Cecilia Roth
    • Merche
    Rubén Tobías
    • Policía
    • (as Ruben Tobias)
    Concha Grégori
    Concha Grégori
    • Sofia
    • (as Concha Gregori)
    Ángel Sánchez Harguindey
    • Periodista
    • (as Angel S. Harguindey)
    Mariela Serrano
    • Espe
    • Director
      • Pedro Almodóvar
    • Writer
      • Pedro Almodóvar
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    6.58.8K
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    Featured reviews

    cyn_duncan

    definitely worth watching

    This is early Almodovar, and if you've seen his other early films, you know what to expect. If you haven't seen them, then you might be surprised. The film is funny, unpredictable, and endearing in a kinky, warped kind of way. Almodovar's nuns are wonderful characters. With straight faces and looks of piety, they do outrageous things without batting an eye. There are probably many ways to interpret the film, but I think it's about acceptance. We're all "sinners" in one way or another, as the nuns would say, and it's not up to us to judge or condemn other people. The sisters are very forgiving - in fact, they love sinners! - and they create a little haven where marginal people can find shelter. They are eccentric, they do things that mainstream society condemns, but they don't really do any harm to anyone and maybe even help some people find their path in life. This isn't the Catholic Church's idea of what a convent should be like, and I understand that very devout people would be offended by the way Almodóvar treats the subject. Still, he does it in a kind of gentle, good humored way and he offers an alternative vision of religious devotion that can make you laugh if you aren't too uptight about these things. Things don't always make sense, but that's fine, things don't make sense in life sometimes, either. Just sit back and watch, and enjoy the twists and turns.
    8contact_charlie

    It's not every day you see a nun on smack

    It's not very often that you can go back this far in a director's career and find a film this good.

    It's sure as hell not sentimental; it's a black comedy - you've got parody, satire and a dark-humour rolled into one.

    There already signs of Almodóvar's skill at film-making, already touches of Almodóvar's trademark whit and humour. It starts out with a girl at a crossroads in her life: on the one hand, a drug fuelled crazy future… the other, the stability of a convent. Or is that the other way round? For those familiar with Almodóvar's films, there are some of the reoccurring themes you'd expect to find, amongst others: prostitution, nuns, drugs, and dealers. More specifically, Dark Habits seems to deal with (to me anyway) a novelist (Almodóvar's film's often touch on creativity/ those involved), the idea of what is good, and along a similar vain, our abilities to turn a new leaf.

    Obviously being in subtitles is going to exclude this for some, but others are whole-heartedly recommended; even if it isn't the best Almodóvar film, I've found it the most enjoyable so far. (I haven't heard a quote better than "I'm Sister Rat of the Sewers. I was keen to meet you" recently.)

    Oh, and look out for the tiger ;-)
    8davidtraversa-1

    "Entre tinieblas" or "Wondering about"

    "Entre tinieblas": "In the Dark" maybe "Wondering about", "Somebody that has lost his/her way" would be the closest translation to the Spanish title.

    "Dark Habits" is so parochial, so banal, that changes completely the message of this movie.

    I just saw it today, out of nostalgia, since I own a copy, but very seldom I see a movie more than once.

    Throughout the years I've seen this one three times! Every time it excels the last view. It isn't the best Almodovar. At the time he didn't have the money (and therefore the incredible terseness of his more recent filmography) nor the experience to make a work of art of every single frame, as he has accustomed us during the last several years. But this films grabs you from the very beginning with such guts that it's impossible to point out its formula.

    It's simply magic.

    Cristina Sánchez Pascual is not Greta Garbo, but again, like the movie itself, she has "something" in her personality that mesmerizes you whenever she's on the screen.

    The way Chus Lampreave ("Sor Rata de Callejón" or "Sister Rat of the Back Alley") delivers her lines is comparable to the way Carol Channing or Eartha Kitt used to delivered theirs: Sheer pleasure to the ears and the brain.

    I don't know how it could sound to somebody that needs to read the translation, but for a Spanish speaking person this woman is unique. She could read the telephone book and make it irresistibly funny.

    The character of the Marquess (Mary Carrillo) is Almodovar 100%, when she comments to the Abbess Julia: "I'm a cosmetician", "¿Really?", "Of course, see my face?" and she shows an incredibly clownish face that only an inebriated cosmetician would have done.

    And the Bolero that Lucho Gatica sings --"Encadenados" "Chained Together"-- is simply so gorgeous that one could melt on the spot out of utter delight, I swear. (I have to find it on "You Tube"!!).

    This movie doesn't deserve 8 points, I simply gave it 8 points in my vote because of its masterly ways to grab one's imagination with not too many resources. I adore this movie. It's imperfect, the photography is not very good, the acting leaves a lot to be desired, the sets are in general quite poor..., the script...MMM-mmm, but the movie is sublime!!
    6blanche-2

    Sister Act with the Almodovar Touch

    "Dark Habits" from 1983 was Pedro Almodovar's first film made with a decent producer, film company, and budget.

    There are signs of his later brilliance in films like "Woman on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown" and "All About My Mother," but even for the quirky Almodovar, this is one strange film.

    "Sister Act" is vaguely reminiscent of this movie, only in the fact that "Dark Habits" concerns Yolanda, a nightclub performer (Cristina Sánchez Pascual) whose boyfriend (Will More) overdoses while she's in his apartment.

    Yolanda panics, afraid she will be accused of killing him by the police, so, wearing her red sequined gown, she hides out in a Madrid convent.

    This is unlike any convent depicted before or since. Some of the nuns, like Yolanda herself, are drug addicts, doing heroin and coke. One nun has a pet tiger. Another writes sexy novels under a pseudonym. Another nun designs fashions and is in love with the local priest.

    The Mother Superior is a lesbian and falls in love with Yolanda. The nuns all have strange names, depicting that man is the lowest form of animal: Sister Snake, Sister Rat, etc.

    The big problem at the convent at the moment is that the Marquesa (Mary Carillo), now that her generous husband is dead, has decided to withdraw patronage from the convent. One of the nuns gets information about the Marquesa's daughter and decides to blackmail her with it.

    "Dark Habits," I believe, suggests the Movida Madrilenia, a hedonistic countercultural movement that took place in Madrid after the death of Franco.

    It was meant to represent a new Spanish identity, an identity characterized by freedom of expression, use of recreational drugs, and even a new dialect.

    It was a hedonistic culture that more or less destroyed itself by the overuse of heroin. At the end of the era, Madrid was left with drug addicts, dead junkies, people leaving Madrid for their original hometowns, and for others, rehabilitation and a useful life.

    The convent serves as a microcosm of this movement. Here one sees art, drugs, music, and homosexuality.

    A fascinating if sometimes uncomfortable film, and certainly not representative of the later Almodovar, who himself has distanced himself from this offbeat, dark film.
    8dutchtom1

    A love/hate story about heroine

    This film made after Almodovar's first more upbeat outrageous films, is a film that tells of the end of the Movida Madrilenia, a movement existing in the early eighties in Madrid that was defined by a mixture of new romantic punk and pop, and the ironic use of Spanish folklore and the 'housewife' culture. When people in this subculture started to commonly use heroine, the downfall of the movement had begun. This film is about the choices that people had to make at the end of this era. some stayed junkies, others died, some went back to the small towns where they had moved from, others went on to give up on drugs and become more constructive. The convent where the nuns reside can be interpreted as the habitation of this irreverent movement, frequented by police searches, dealers, artists, and junkies. The movie has some great musical moments which indicate that Almodovar might one day take his hand to this genre. The religious element interwtined with (homo)sexuality will certainly be proliferated again in the forthcoming movie La Mala Educacion. The movie also contains a cameo of a Spanish 'Harrold Robbins' type of writer, who is featured sitting at one of the tables wiping her mouth with a handkerchief as Yolanda sings in a night club at the beginning of the movie. This authopr refers to the character of sister Rata de Callejon, who has a secret career as trashy novel writer. The film is somewhat darker than most of Almodovar's early movies, but is very gentle, provides enough comedy and the characters above all remain very human, all of them have their virtues and vices.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Pedro Almodóvar's first film to have a proper producer and be made for a proper film company, rather than be made on the hoof like his previous projects. Almodóvar has since distanced himself from the film as he felt that he had to bow to commercial considerations.
    • Goofs
      The "Salí porque salí" song is obviously not sung by Yolanda nor the backing vocalists.
    • Quotes

      Superiora: One of the bases of our community is self-mortification and humiliation. That's why we have such bizarre-sounding names: Sister Manure, Sister Rat, Sister Damned, Sister Snake. Man will not be saved until he realizes he is the most despicable being ever created.

    • Connections
      Referenced in El Coleta & Jarfaiter: El Piko 3 (2014)
    • Soundtracks
      Salí porque salí
      Written by J. Curiel Alonso

      Arranged by Miguel Morales

      Performed by Sol Pilas

      Edited by Música Latina N.Y. (USA)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 31, 1990 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • Spain
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Entre tinieblas
    • Filming locations
      • Madrid, Spain
    • Production company
      • Tesauro
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 54 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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