Monday, September 16, 2024

Skincare: Beauty and Revenge in Hollywood

By José Alberto Hermosillo


“Skincare” is a striking and intriguing new thriller that scrutinizes the lucrative cosmetic industry and its unfair business practices. In this sturdy story, rivalry and manipulation reach self-destruction, jealousy, and even death in the most astonishing form that could only happen in Hollywood.

Hope Goldman, a successful Hollywood aesthetician, attempted to launch her new Italian-made line of products in a national TV interview to take her business to the next level. 
Elizabeth Banks impeccably and intensively plays Hope Goldman in a role tailored specifically for her. Hope shows the world a radiant face of success, reassuring herself with her overwhelming personality and positive affirmations: “Reputation is everything in the skincare business.”
A morning after her ritual beauty treatment, Hope’s email and social media accounts are hacked. This prompts all her clients to cancel appointments, which causes chaos and damages her prestige and economic well-being. Hope’s business plummets.

Her quest to find the online hackers who are trying to sabotage her life makes her go ballistic. “Beauty is a cutthroat business.” 

In “Skincare,” Hope Goldman (Elizabeth Banks) sees her new neighbor, cosmetologist Angel Vergara (Luis Gerardo Méndez, “Belascoáran PI,” “Time Share,” and “We Are the Nobles/Nosotros los Nobles”), owner of the next-door spa salon, “Shimmer by Angel” a threat to her business. The successful and talented Mexican actor pulls together the strange antagonist character perfectly and serves as a decoy in this tangled story.

Hope’s story is inspiring, but competition is cruel in that kind of business. As the “Me Too” movement progressed, women became more confident in fighting back against the executives’ and talent’s predatory behaviors, as happened to Hope.

Success is not an accident. It would be best if she got out of that sticky situation. The key is the “Professional” advice from her close friend and life coach, Jordan Weaver (Lewis Pullman). A frustrated actor, Weaver gives Hope a little peace of mind with his advice.

Australian director Austin Peters(“Give Me Future”) with “Skincare” made an engaging thriller by resolving all the characters’ storylines. Indeed, Mr. Peters, with an enormous amount of energy shown in the film, is able to bring out the best of each actor’s potential to transmit the right emotions to the audience. 

In “Skincare,” Elizabeth Banks is brilliant in one of the best roles of her career.

Similar and fascinating stories brought to the big screen in recent years are Sofia Coppola’s celebrity teen thieves’ “Bling Ring,” Almodóvar’s obscure medical thriller, “La piel que habito.” Finally, Nicolas Winding Refn’s supermodels’ bloody feast allegory, “The Neon Demon.”

The recent LA Noir, Apple TV series “Sugar,” starring Colin Farrell and directed by Fernando Meirelles and Adam Arkin, brings a similar somber Hollywood atmosphere, representing its inhabitants stuck in somewhere Angelinos know as “La La Land.”

However, the female lead’s obsession with beauty became delusional in other influential leading ladies in film history, such as Norma Desmond (Gloria Swanson) in “Sunset Boulevard,” who wanted to come back to acting. Farrah Fawcett in “Extremities” trying to get out of a rape situation. Renée Zellweger, in “Nurse Betty,” really wants to play a nurse in a soap opera to be close to the lead actor. Nichole Kidman’s obsession with belonging to a TV show in “To Die For.” More recently, the Academy-winning Jessica Chastain in “The Eyes of Tammy Faye” is obsessed with people’s attention, fame and fortune. 

To be a stalker is not considered a syndrome yet but is linked to other afflictions that affect different areas of the human body: narcissism, egotism, psychosis, depression, anxiety, and vulnerability.

“Skincare,” the movie, is elusively based on a real-life beautician who was arrested for plotting the murder of a competitor. Hope Goldman is confident that she will prevail in her ordeal.

Despite the lack of story development for the supporting characters, Hope’s ordeal prevails for whatever her goal is: survival, anger, revenge, or redemption, not because untrustworthy people surround her. The fact that the neighbor opened a similar facility across from her venue is something she considers unfair business practices. Without thinking about the old saying: “the sun rises for everyone,” she continues her quest for revenge. Still, in the end, all the players in this story must pay for their infamous actions.

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Festival in LA ©2024

Saturday, September 14, 2024

The Hacienda of the Mexican Opera Singer & Hollywood Film Star José Mojica (1896-1974) in Santa Monica

By José Alberto Hermosillo

"La Finca de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe" is a four-lot estate in Santa Monica, California, near Malibu, formerly belonged to the late José Mojica (1895-1974), a renowned Mexican actor, opera singer, and priest in Peru. This magical place is appraised at approximately $26 million. The expansive Spanish-style stucco residence, designed by Merril Baird, was constructed in 1929.

The La Senora Research Institute hosted a conference and a series of commemorative events to mark the second anniversary of José Mojica's birth. During these events, the public had exclusive access to the mansion, his biography and, most importantly, his movies.

José Mojica Movies:

One Mad Kiss (1930), Hollywood

When Love Laughs (Cuando el amor ríe) (1931), Hollywood

Hay que casar al príncipe (1931), Hollywood

Law of The Harem (La ley del harem) (1931), Hollywood

Mi último amor (1931), Hollywood

El caballero de la noche (1932), Hollywood

El precio de un beso (1933), Hollywood

The King of Gypsies (El rey de los gitanos) (1933), Hollywood

Melodía prohibida (1933), Hollywood

La cruz y la espada (1934), Hollywood

Un capitán de cosacos (1934), Hollywood

Love Frontiers (Las fronteras del amor) (1934), Hollywood

 

El Capitán aventurero (1938), México

La canción del milagro (1940), México

El Pórtico de la Gloria (1953), México

Yo pecador (1959), México

Seguiré tus pasos (1966), México

El pecado de una madre (1960), México

 

Melodías de América (1941), Argentina.


José Mojica Hacienda
José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.


José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.


José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.


José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.



José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.


José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.


José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.

José Mojica Hacienda in Santa Monica. Photo by José Alberto Hermosillo.


Related Articles: 

IF YOU ARE READING FROM A MOBILE DEVICE, CLICK: view web version FOR OTHER COOL FEATURES SUCH AS TRANSLATE POWERED BY GOOGLE, AN INTERACTIVE FILM FESTIVAL CALENDAR, AND MORE AWESOME ARTICLES.

Festival in LA ©2024