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Last updated: 07 Jun 2026 at 20:44 UTC

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Review of by Ahmedaiman1999 — 17 May 2021

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One thing I noticed, and adored, about Almodóvar, is that despite his unequivocal propensity for incorporating comedy with melodrama, there's no way his films could come across as either silly or overly sentimental.

For his stories are laced with considerable nuance. His Women on the Verge on a Nervous Breakdown, which is also based on Jean Cocteau's play, "La voix humaine" as this short is, maintains an incremental humorous tone so much so it could be adequately described, by its end, as a farce.

Yet, as we see Pepa trying to figure out why her lover dumped her without an explanation, Almodóvar delves into Pepa's psyche with great subtlety that's apt for her precarious state. It's a story with no shortage of details.

That's why I thought The Human Voice would benefit greatly from the concentrated nature of short films. Our unnamed protagonist's waiting for three days for her lover to come in a last chance to see him has filled her with rage.

A vindictive rage almost identical to that of The Bride in Kill Bill, but she still loves him. So she acts out like a maniac: stabbing one of her lover’s suits with an axe in a harmless cathartic release.

She wouldn't dare to actually hurt him; she still loves him. Therefore, she's so vulnerable. Over the course of her conversation with his lover, her seemingly stable and wry demeanour gradually crumbles, exposing both her helplessness and her futile undirected rage.

Almodóvar brilliantly highlights such contradiction by placing her in her exuberantly furnished, sumptuously colored apartment that's constructed on a soundstage. As she grows more desperate, she begins to lose control.

Finally, she decides to free herself from the submissive woman she was, and put an end to their toxic relationship — after all, her love made her too fragile and delicate to venture to turn the tables on him as Alma did on Reynolds in Phantom Thread.

The thing is, I didn't feel that she loves him. What's baffling is that I can't put my finger on why exactly I feel so, but it's likely due to the stagy feel this film has. It is a showcase of Tilda Swinton's thespian prowess, but, at times, her monologue comes off rather like a soliloquy — like there's no one on the other side of the phone line.

Regardless, The Human Voice is an eye-popping, exquisitely-made feminist work with witty sarcastic undertones.

This review of The Human Voice (2021) was written by on 17 May 2021.

The Human Voice has generally received very positive reviews.

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