Friday, May 23, 2008
Fuego, Friday 5/23 (#s 1 & 2): Gran Noche de Reruns
- We are introduced to Libia Reyes and Bernardo Elizondo, who are having a March-December romance. We also meet Libia's volatile brothers (heroic Juan, intellectual dreamer Franco, and fun Oscar) and Bernardo's daughters (heroic Sofia, intellectual dreamer Sarita, and fun Jimena). The Reyes brothers immediately dislike Bernardo and assume that he's using their sister.
- We see that the Reyes are orphans who have a bakery and are barely scraping by financially. The Elizondos have a hacienda which is apparently very profitable even though there's no hint as to what is grown/produced there.
- We watch concha-baker Juan and concha-enthusiast Sofia have their very first simultaneous split-screen conchagasm.
- We discover that Bernardo's wife, Crabi/Gabriela, is a raging bitch who won't have sex with her husband nor allow a separation; guilts her daughters mercilessly and doesn't permit them to have a social life; forced her oldest daughter Sofia to marry a slimeball named Fe*nando shortly after being raped; and dreams of someday having her eccentric but observant father institutionalized.
- We are told that Sofia finds Fe*nando repulsive, doesn't love him, will never love him, experiences post-traumatic stress about the rape every time he touches her, and married him only with the understanding that she won't have sex with him. He is obviously frustrated by this arrangement, but tolerates it for reasons that seem obvious to everyone watching this telenovela, yet none of the Elizondos (except maybe Grandpa Agustin, but he's not an Elizondo, he's an Acevedo).
- We find that Fe*nando spends his spare time raping and otherwise abusing a nightclub performer named Rosario, whose act consists of one song about a killer bonbon (or possibly a bonbon killer, I'm not sure which). We also see that Rosario and Franco are a potential item.
- We meet Eva, the housekeeper, who is in love with Bernardo and is treated like garbage by Crabiela.
- We witness Libia using the only high-tech gadget in town - a pregnancy test - to discover she's pregnant; meanwhile Bernardo plans to separate from his bitter, crabby, self-proclaimed irreproachable wife.
- We watch as Fe*nando semi-accidentally kills Bernardo in a scuffle and pins the accident on some local guys, then later bludgeons/chokes/drowns Libia (who threw a fit at Bernardo's wake when she found out he was married) after discovering that Lidia's unborn child could inherit some of Bernardo's estate. He also steals Libia's mother's necklace.
Monday: Oscar and Franco make friends with the Uribe twits, Tall One and Piglet.
Labels: Fuego
Back to yesterday's clothing discussion, regarding Juan's charro pants, it looks like he is always ready for the jaripeo.
I found a page about a real jaripeo, and it appears from the photos that the riders wear jeans.
Click the link at my name to see, "JARIPEO - THE DRIVE-IN RODEO."
I am no horsewoman, so could someone who is tell me whether Eduardo is a decent rider -- good enough to win that trophy at the jaripeo?
He rides horseback a lot in novelas; but for the jaripeo in Fuego, in the scene where he won the trophy, they used a stunt double -- and the guy was facing his back to the camera the whole time.
I remember hearing a news report that Eduardo had been injured on the set involving a riding scene.
La Paloma
Que GROSS. Glad that's over. Hope it stays that way.
Dear Pablo/Franco,
We are all dying to know your secret. How do you manage, episode after episode, to properly say your lines straight to Rosario's face? Is there some actor's method that somehow overides the primal urge to look down, or is the show's editing just that good? Please tell us! Don't make us beg.
Thanks for the link, Jeri.
And thanks for the wittiness, Julie!
jb
As for Juan working barefoot:
I once burned my foot pretty badly when I was taking a slice of pizza fresh from the oven and was barefoot. A glop of cheese fell, and dot dot dot.
Next time, I thought I was smart because I wore socks. (Still no shoes.) I was pouring hot water for tea, when a glop of hot water fell on my sock, and dot dot dot.
My motto since 1992: do not go into the kitchen without heavy winter shoes.
It was good in a way to see the way it started out and I was able to tape a part of the dialog that I thought I had heard the first time about Papa saying to Feo-rnando that he knew he was Sofia's abuser. At the time some commenters said I was wrong but now I have the "red" not "white house" tapes.... Feo had lots of reasons to be scared of Papa Bernardo and seemed surprised that Feo's threat to tell GabiCrabi the truth didn't scare PB at all, in fact he was on his way to make the same declarations about his true love himself. PB was on to the feckless and unfortunately fatal Feo on so many levels.
The violence to the sweetie pie Libia in her death scene was way more upsetting but just barely more distasteful to watch than the waterfall moments. I agree with BBQueen, it was hard to take visually but I just checked IMDB and she is 23 although she sure
looks 15 but sheeesh, and Yuuuuuch!
Jeri, thanks again for another colorful side trip about the Jaripeo. I have been wanting to go to Juan Mata Ortiz to see the pottery and it sounds like a really fine little pueblo.
Good right hook, eh? I'll buy that, Julie. :)
I got it some years ago, and it was just a happy coincidence that the jaripeo page was part of that fellow's website about the pottery.
To see the book at Amazon, click the link. They have it new on sale at the moment, and there are some used copies also.
When they say abuser in Mexico they can also mean someone who takes serious advantage of someone.
For those who are not making sense of this telenovela or can't quite believe that it is so silly, I recommend the youtube of Parodia's take on FELS:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4K_HyibJm3M
Many thanks. JudyB
I wrote that page years ago. So long ago, I often forget it exists. The pop-up advice on that page may be out of date, but I think the rest still applies. Hope it helps.
BTW, you may want to peek at Humor Page too.
Put your cursor in the address bar (the place you type a web site address to pull it up). Make sure the address bar is empty. Right-click your mouse, and select Paste. Viola! There's the text. The Paste command spits out whatever was the last thing put into your clipboard.
And as for the humor page, thank God Almighty, those are someone else's stories, not mine!
I don't remember Bernardo specifically saying that he knew Fernando had raped Sofia, just that he didn't like the way he treated her.
Who knows what the deal was with Libia. What social class did she represent? And -- agreed, waaay too young for the old Bernardo.
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