Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Las tontas no van #66, Mon 3/9, I JUST noticed Marissa acting strangely

We all know the most-repeated phrases of telenovelas: no puede ser, sueltame, desgraciado, etc. Tonight we add a new one to the list: “I’m worried about the baby.” Wanna' guess how many times we hear it?

At his hotel room, Pat again asks Alicia to leave him alone. He just did the hardest thing of his life; he delivered Candy to his rival. Ali, who claims to love him so much, can only think of her pain, not his. It must run in the family. She admits that she always dreamed of the day Candy would reject him, but she didn’t want it to be like this. She’ll keep striving until he realizes how much she loves him. Alicia, give it up already! Alicia leaves, but we can be sure, like MacArthur and Schwarzenegger, she’ll be back.

In one of the clinic’s examining rooms, Santiago explains to Candy that they closed the office for the wedding, and no one will bother them. After his usual flirting, she suggests that he needs to confront his emotions. Candy would be the perfect candidate to help him face his emotions, were it not for the enormous log in her eye (more on that in the next paragraph). He says, apart from Marissa’s plot, he’s glad he halted the wedding, because of what he feels for Candy. He has uncovered his feelings and emotions, but now what is he supposed to do with them?

Santiago muses, “I was at the altar, at the point of saying yes, when your call came like a miracle. Know why? Because I was about to marry and spend the rest of my life with a woman I don’t love. I lived with someone and didn’t even realize that I didn’t know her - the mother of my son. Can you believe it?” But Santi is bothered by a suspicion. Did Candy really, truly hear that? After all, maybe she lied just a little (Candy? Lie? Cómo puede ser?) to win a grand prize like him. The man who Candy says needs to confront his emotions tells his ‘counselor,’ “You know I love you. And you love me too. But since you don’t let yourself admit that (Candy looks away, rather than facing her emotions), maybe you invented the story about Marissa’s plot.” Or, giving her space to evade him, he suggests that maybe she did it to get a scoop on a best-seller story for her column! Santi is boggled – what kind of woman would separate a father from his son? (Maybe Candy has some answers for that one.) Candy says she needs to perform surgery on Santiago’s heart. What will she find?

At her apartment, Marissa and Raúl are trying to figure out what happened, and what should be their next move. He counsels that the only way she can win this match is to be cold. She proposes a wager on who will suffer more, Candy or Santiago.

At the clubhouse, Ed says he expected Santi to cancel the wedding at any moment, but not at that moment! Carlos says Santi is his idol. Hector is worried about Raúl – he went kinda’ nutso. What will happen when Raúl and Santiago are together in the club? Carlos says maybe they should let Marissa be an abandonada. Hector says she’s hot, but she’s poison.

Candy is examining Santiago on the operating table. What is in his heart? His daughters, his mama, a couple of friends, and Candy. Candy examines his heart and sees a lot of pain because of the woman that abandoned him. She sees fears, and he admits that he worries for his daughters, he fears losing his mama, he fears what Mar might do to his son (1), and he fears because he has found love and it’s so very close (he takes her hand) but it might slip away (she pulls her hand away). She sees doubts of the heart. Let’s review. Candy sees pain, fears, and doubts? I think the heart Candy is seeing is not Santiago’s.

Candy asks why he planned to go through with the wedding. It was because he thought it would help him to recover. He finally realized, with Candy reconciling with Pat, that his love for her was hopeless, and he thought that marriage might enable him to forget the pain of losing her. Candy is stunned that her capricious waffling, cowardice, and indecision caused so much pain and almost caused a disaster. Now maybe she’ll realize that you can’t just play with somebody’s heart like that, without somebody getting hurt. And maybe pigs will fly.

The institute staff discusses the ramifications of the day. Chayo says Santiago is a great dad but he’ll never marry. He’s been chasing women ever since Pau abandoned him. Soledad wishes Candy and Pat were together, but the others recognize it’s because Sol wants the leftovers. Ceci points out that if Santi doesn’t marry Marissa because he’s with Candy, Mar won’t come back to the institute. Goodbye institute, goodbye radio program, goodbye employment.

Speaking of the queen of Rome, she tells Raúl, “He’ll beg me to see his son, but he’ll never even get to know his name.” Raúl won’t see him either. Raúl starts to worry for his nephew (2). He realizes that his sister may be turning dangerous (nice time to lock the barn door, Toots!), and he tells her they should abandon the plot since Santi ran out on the wedding. The two start arguing about her plans, when in walks Santiago. Suerte, Matador! He says that, had they gotten married, it would have hurt both of them, so he knows he did the right thing. In fact, he’s finally doing what he should have done long ago but didn’t have the guts. (Bulls-eye! Or maybe steers-eye.) Marissa says it was Candy’s fault he halted (frenar: put the brakes on) the wedding. Santi hands her the bombshell; he knows that she planned to disappear with the baby after the wedding. Mar calls Raúl into the ring and wants him to back her up. She insists that what Candy said is a ridiculous lie. Raúl dodges, “You know I wouldn't let anything happen to my nephew.” Raúl and Mar agree that Candy did it because she wanted Santiago for herself. Santiago knows who to believe, because he knows that all along, Candy had countless chances to derail the wedding for her own interests.

Marissa reminds Santi that Candy is known as Doña Mentiras, and he has to admit that Marissa doesn’t lie to him. Raúl plays offended because Santi won’t believe his old friend. Santiago suggests that they need to cool off and sleep on it, and they can deal with it tomorrow. He expresses his concern for the baby (3), and she essentially tells him to shove it. Santi leaves, and the moment the door shuts, our fib-sibbs panic because the gig is up. Mar asks what they will do, and Raúl corrects: “Us? No. What will you do?”

Candy sits in her room remembering. Chapala kisses, moonlight dancing, and an interrupted wedding. Her mom brings her tea and tucks her in, just like when she was little. They remember those times, and Gregoria says she used to listen to the girls’ lights-out talk through the door. (Chismosa metiche!)

Writing in her diary, Candy ponders some more. She saved Santiago, but she’s worried about Marissa because she hates Candy, hates Santi, and might hurt the baby (4). Candy realizes she needs to be careful about Mar. You gotta’ hand it to Candy, she never misses a trick, though she usually waits until three weeks after the horses have left the barn. Chava comes in and climbs into bed with Mama. He asks if he can marry Rocío. Nope. Then trying for Plan B, can they be novios? Wellll, okay.

Sven and Ole prop each other up as they stagger into the restaurant. Sven steps on a business envelope on the floor. He doesn’t notice it, but we do. Ole starts a joke: How is an interrupted wedding like a Chivas vs. America match? Sven doesn’t know. Neither does Ole; he hoped Sven knew.

Meño arrives, sees the drunks, and reads the letter. Pat walks in, and Meño tells him that tomorrow the new owners take possession of the restaurant. All his memories, all his work, gone just like that. Pat offers to put together one last blow-out, so the restaurant can go out in style. Meño needed that support.

Isabel listens while Santiago rehashes his feelings. He hates what he had to do, but he’s also relieved. The wedding never should’ve happened, and he feels like he can breath again. He notes Marissa has “dark crevices in her mind,” and he’s just worried what she might do with the baby (5). It sounds like Santi, Candy, and Raúl are recognizing simultaneously that Marissa is dangerously unstable. Mama recommends that Santiago take a nice hot bath so he can sleep. If this were a Colunga novela, the next scene would be... Alas, it’s not. The next scene is a sunrise.

Raúl calls on Candy to try to rearrange the truth. He says she lied about escaping with Santiago. She redirects the conversation to Marissa’s plot to disappear with the baby. Raúl claims he doesn’t know what she’s talking about, but she knocks that idea down in one blow. As she kicks him out, she tells him, “One of us is lying, and it’s not me.”

Meanwhile, Paulina will take Fantasy Worlds for 800, Alex. When Santiago fled his wedding, she assumed he wanted to get back with her. He tells her ‘no’ clearly, but Paulina has trouble with concepts like “no.” Santi reminds her that she has a daughter. An e-mail, a card, a little phone call, is it too much to ask? “Sure, Santi, sure. And for starters, can you give her this goodbye note because I’m too much of a slime mold to face her myself.” Loosely translated.


At home, Papa reads Rocío the note. “I’m sending you this letter through your papa because I don’t like goodbyes. I promise to call you de vez en cuando (every so often). I’ll miss you very, very much.” Roc asks, “Not even a kiss?” Thinking fast, papa explains that she didn’t put the kisses in the letter, instead she put him in charge of giving her 1,535 kisses. Papa remembers a song he used to sing to her when she was little, as little as a mouse, and Rocío wants to hear it again. Papa sings and gets misty as he remembers when Roc was a baby.

Ha nacido un sol, que aparte de hoy ilumine mi alma.
Eres tu, mi gran amor, que abra la esperanza en mi.

A sun was born, that starting today lights my soul.
It’s you, my great love, that awakens hope in me.

Roc wonders if she’ll ever see her mother again. Papa explains that in life there are happy things and sad things, but all of them make you a better person. No matter what happens, her mama and her papa will always be in her heart (that's not very reassuring). To cheer her up, he does a magic trick with a piece of paper because to Rocío, her papa is magical.

At the restaurant, they are packing up everything. Ole is long-faced, Gregoria is blubbering, and Sven is singing the blues. Meño, the one losing everything, is left to cheer up everyone else. Pat arrives and explains that he’s there to present the new owners. But they are not ready to take charge so they need a manager. Candy asks, “I suppose that’s you, Pat?” No. He explains that starting today, Meño is the manager of the property. And the new owners? His sons, Chava and Beto.

Candy is ecstatic. She runs up and gives Pato a big appreciative hug. He confesses that it hurts because he loves her and she is with Santiago. Candy corrects him. She saved Santi from Marissa, but she’s not with him. In fact, at the moment she would like to be with Pat because she’s tired of being alone, tired of running from the past, and tired of running from Pat (but apparently not tired of running from Santiago).

Vocabulary
de vez en cuando – every so often
frenar – to put the brakes on
’toy contigo – short for ‘Estoy contigo.’ I’m here for you; I’ll support you. It’s what Isabel tells Santiago.

Tuesday:
Where have all the chinos gone?
Marissa threatens that the baby might have an “accident”
Raúl fights with Santiago
Marissa trashes the institute

A couple of marginally related points.
1. Jaime Camil started a new 6-week show for Televisa Saturday, Aventura por Mexico.
2. For those of you who use music to improve your Spanish, last week on a MEPS recap, someone recommended Pandora.com, a free service with no ads, that plays music through the internet, customized to your preferences. I’ve been listening to Latin Pop all week, and I couldn’t be happier with the service.

Labels:


Comments:
Hmm.
Our hero is finally positioned to win.
Rival is involved in a restaurant sale, saving heroine's bacon.
Heroine switches sides.

Ring any bells?
 

enjoyed the screen shots! Thanks! and I am just blown away by how great the kid actors are in this show. They are natural and beyond adorable. Remember how bad, bad bad bad the kid actors in Telenovelas used to be? (Shudder.)
 

Paula, yee of thee great imagination, you never told us what your fantasy storyline would be with this show. I can't wait to hear your thoughts! Carlos' were very imaginative.

I haven't seen last night's show, was at class (hey, I got an A on my microbiology exam, YEAH!!, thanks for your good vibes everyone), but have it on tape and will use what you sent me, Paula, to help with my Spanish translation. Thank you again.
 

Paula, what a superb recap. Your ability to keep all the characters straight is impressive and I admire your style. Although I was not surprised by Pat purchasing the restaurant, I was happy to see that he bought it for his 2 sons. That was a very nice touch and a very touching scene. Marissa's descent into madness is chilling and Raul's complicity is even more troubling. I still have no idea whom Candy will choose. It's amazing how many people's lives and futures seem to depend on her ever changing whims. Indeed it's all about her.

Carlos
 

Most excellent recap my dear. So what was that, 5 total of I'm worried about the baby? Oh dear.

Nice touch, Pato purchasing the restaurant for the boys, I was actually surprised.

Yep, Marissa is creeping me out big time.

Congratulations Violet!
 

I have to admit, I just shuddered at the end of tonight's show when Candy touched Patricio's face and said she was tired of being alone. Here we go again. Santiago has his hopes up of getting Candy and so does Patricio (after a VERY heartbreaking experience.) Will Candy's jerking these two men around ever end??? Doesn't she realize that her body language and words go beyond, "I care about you as a friend..."?

Thanks for the great details on this recap. Although I got the gist of it,I completely missed most of what was being said between Santiago and Candy in the operating room. Ditto for the conversation between Sven and Ole. I heard "Chivas and America", but couldn't figure out why they were talking about soccer. It didn't seem to fit with the rest of the conversation. Now I realize it was the start of a joke. I generally get the big picture of things, but often miss these small details, so the recaps are a BIG help!

Thanks!
 

Permit me to drop the "I" bomb: do we know for a fact that Marissa's pregnant by Santiago and not Raul? Tell me they're not "closer" than any other brother/sister you've known. Plus they're both off the deep end - her tantrum last night and his creepy shrine to his dead wife.

Patricio might try touching a lit cigarette to Alicia's butt - that's supposed to work for ticks and leeches. It might also work for a big parasite?

Paula, thanks for another great recap!
 

Hey Paula...this was one of your best recaps yet. And you always do a great job.

Like Mike, I'm wondering who the father of Marissa's baby is but I'm not thinking Raul. I'm wondering if she had herself artificially inseminated in order to use the baby to hurt Santiago, tricking him into thinking it's his and then "disappearing" it. She's is one very disturbed woman.

I like seeing Gregoria become softer and more supportive. Her comfort scene with Candy was very nice. However, I'm not sure it's a good idea to snuggle in bed with your 8-year-old son and insist on being his no. 1 "novia". I still think that relationship is a little 'off'.

Also, I actually liked Alicia in her scene with Patricio. I thought she was supportive (for her) and she did finally leave. That was a big step for her and an improvement over the frantic "Hola mi amor" and the sex goddess route she's been taking.

Vioet, CONGRATS!!!! A "A" on the microbiology test. Someone needs to put a gold star on your fridge. That's fantastic.

And where's Diana in Maine? We've been missing her lately.
 

Sorry, Compadre, I don't buy it.

1. This novela is lighter than most. I wouldn't expect them to bring in a topic that dark, especially not in the 7:00 time slot.

2. We haven't seen any clues pointing at that, other than the closeness. We also haven't seen any clues about Mar being with anybody else in recent times. Whereas we do have her meeting with Santi when he was doped up for the tattoo. The timing matches.

3. A lot of the family affection in this novela seems excessive in our culture. Hortensia is so cariñosa with her brother. Gregoria climbs into Candy's bed. Candy is afraid to love any man so she has redirected all her affection to her son. Santi and Ed snuggle on the couch in his office (not family, I know, but I was hoping you wouldn't notice). I think the Raul/Mar relationship seems comparable to others in this show.
 

Thank you Paula for a very enjoyable recap!
Mariloca is definitely headed off the edge. I wonder who she will take with her.
I'm liking Raul less and less.
I think perhaps Americans just aren't as open to showing affection as some other cultures? I don't see why Candy's affection toward her son is so different than Santi's towards his daughter.
I have sons too and have felt that there has always been a bias toward daughters and affection, whereas sons are suppose to be held at arms length.
There's a lot of snuggling in Santi's case too.
I don't see any harm in any of it but I've worked with other cultures most of my life where this is more the norm and it doesn't seem odd to me to show this affection in a harmless way.
Thanks everyone for all the interesting comments.

Carrie L.
 

Yes Judy, artificial insemination (AI), as a desparate attempt to entrap Santi. Of course, that implies that Santi isn't verile enough to accomplish the task himself, and TN heros are always as productive as a prize bull. Then again, in light of Santi's comment to his nether regions as he walked in the door of his bachelor party.. OTOH, the post-tattoo tryst does match the time frame. But surely Mar could have planned that to cover up the AI plot. Then again... then again, why do I feel like I'm discussing which cup has the iocane powder???
 

Thanks, Paula, for another observant, illuminating and fun recap. I also agree with your comment about the restaurant sale, heroine switching sides, just like LFMB.

I actually feel a little sympathy for Raúl. I know he´s lying now to protect Marissa, but he´s being pulled in 3 different directions. 1) He´s been Santi´s friend since childhood, but 2) he has to protect his sister, and 3) he still may have desires or hopes for Candy and himself. I'd like to think that he'll be able to stop Mari from her nefarious plans, but I'm not too optimistic.

Marissa is not dumb, and she really does have a lot of power at this point. She has the spy-cam installed, she knows the Institute needs her financially, and she has possession of the the unborn child.

And now that Candy, while stopping the wedding, has told Santiago she does not wanted to get married to him (at this point), and has told Pat she doesn't like being alone, things do not look at all promising for Santiago, although fortunately, he has lots of support, from his mother, his pal Ed, his daughters, Donato, Tina and of course, Hortensia.
 

It is very true that the family dynamic is is very different in Mexico. When I lived there I was very surprised and comforted by the general atmosphere that way..

I do think that Raul is a spineless enabler.. but I have a feeling he may rat mari out... to win over Candy??

Mauni in Wa
 

I think Raul's prime directive, his highest moral obligation, is to protect his sister at all costs, especially because of his guilt for failing to protect her when she was 15.

We can't fault him for that drive. In that setting, what could he do when he saw her start to become unstable? Abandon her? Turn against her? That goes against the prime directive.

But now he is starting to realize that her greatest enemy might be herself, not Santiago. He might have to work against her in order to protect her. That will require a major shift in his worldview. He'll need some internal struggle before he can make that shift.
 

Well, I agree that Latino cultures are more expressive. I had a fun experience the other day when I met the mother of our maintenance lady at school, who is from the Dominican Republic.

She immediately pulled me across the desk and kissed me soundly on both cheeks! I loved it. Reminded me of the way Italians react.

However, there's a difference between that and some of what I find excessive between Candy and her son. Would you all be equally comfortable with Santiago (if he had no love life) snuggling in bed with an 8-year-old daughter? Maybe I've just listened to too many counseling cases, but I find the Candy/Chava dynamic disturbing.

However, I'll stand corrected if y'all disagree.
 

Thanks for the recap Paula. While its sad watching Mariloca go crazy we all knew it was happening... now its just gotten worse.

Violet - congrats on your A!!

Judy - I was thinking along the lines of Carrie L's suggestion that this is just a case of Mexican/Latino/a culture being more expressive than ours and then you brought up the bed and comparing Santi's actions to Candy's. While I'm open to being proved wrong and Candy's actions are just inappropriate (as opposed to exceeding problematic), I'm with you.
 

I can see where you were coming from.. I have 7 year old that I am affectionate with.. Kisses on cheeks lots of hugs and things.. But I don't follow him in the bathroom... that weirded me out a little last night. My son was actually seriously sick with influenza this last week and crawled in bed with me..I was seriously torn.. but you cant deny a kid with a 103 fever whatever the age I guess.... It is a little excessive in Chava's case.
I do like all the different and somewhat atypical dynamics in this novella. I love love love that they are showing the values and acceptance piece.

For example what Pato did for Meño was a huge step for him. I think he has come to value him and respect him despite his "condition"

I love to see some of those walls broken down.
Mauni in WA
 

I can accept the co-sleeping as a cultural thing. What disturbs me is how Chava seems to be Candy's substitute for romantic involvement.

Last night in the "heart surgery," who did Santiago say was in his heart? His daughters (in first position, notice), his mother, a couple of friends, and Candy of course. That is a very healthy balance in his affections.

To which Candy responded, very snotty and proud of herself, "In my heart, my son is in first place." No mention of her mother, Meño, friends, nobody. And obviously no mention of Santiago. To me, the thing that indicates that her affection for Chava is unhealthy, is that she doesn't have room in her heart for anyone else.
 

Thank you everyone for your congratulating me on my test. I do appreciate it. One down, two more exams to go, then I can have the summer maybe to learn more Spanish! I hope so.

Since I didn't watch this show when it started, what is the deal with Marissa? Where does her wealth come from? Was she raped as a young girl? Is that why Raul is so protective of her?

I am so glad Meño's restaurant will be saved. That was a sweet gesture on Patricio's part, not only saving his business, but also putting it in his son's names. I had a feeling either Pat or Santi would be the knight in shining armour. It's a tough call between regarding the man Candy will end up with, but at this point, I don't care. I like them both!
 

Paula may be able to answer this more completely than I can...but here's what I remember.

Marissa was in love at 15, became pregnant, her boyfriend dropped her off at the abortionist and then disappeared. (Her parents were dead and her older brother was out of the country at the time).

She had only a cynical world-weary nurse at her side during the painful aftermath of the procedure and finally was left crying all alone, damaged physically and emotionally.

That is why Raul is so intense about not letting her down now...and why she is so "off" in her stability.

On the other question, Karen I like your word...inappropriate. It is totally innocent on Candy's part I'm sure...but it seems inappropriate. And yet it may not be at all in Latino culture. There are differences.

Or it IS supposed to make us feel uncomfortable so we'll realize Candy really needs to make room for an adult man in her life and not lavish all her affection on one little 8-year-old boy.

Now, whether it will be Santiago or Patricio...I'm sure they want to keep us guessing.
 

I think you answered my question just fine, Judy. I hope you had a lovely trip to Charlotte.
 

I did, Violet, thanks....and I felt so empowered at having managed it myself that I've been bursting with energy ever since. A nice feeling since normally I don't even like to drive downtown, much less negotiate outerbelts in any city. But I did it...and I'm glad.
 

You should be proud of yourself! I also do not like driving anymore, but I find myself driving from Providence to New York City a lot and I am amazed that I do it! Welcome home and back to posting. We missed you.
 

Nice screen shots Paula, and I like the "worried about baby theme" yes, very ominous indeed....hmmmm

Hombre I will get to your recap too, I acutally thought this show and last were pleasantly un-monotonous finally, than just more of Santi chasing and Candy running, although from last night I have to say what the f?

She stops Santi's wedding, bonds with him on the operating table but then tells Smurf that she isn't with Santi but instead has every reason to be with Pato? Eh????

Ok whatever...yes, must prolong agony, can't engage key couple yet, more time more shows....

Sigh...

I'll weigh in on the whole affection thing. Totally not inappropriate and super normal in this culture and plenty others.

People I know do the same thing. Also, especially where there is a tendency for large families and shared space, often times there isn't even another option, and sleeping together is required in order to have a bed. Not the case in this show, I know, but still not out of line, just not what certain other cultures are used to.

I agree Candi is portrayed as having filled her companion void with Chava instead of a male husbandly partner, and people like that have a rough time when the chick leaves the nest, but that is something different than being inappropriately affectionate IMHO.
 

ohh Congrats Violet!!!

Way to go...!
 

Fabulous recap, Paula, just fabulous. What wonderful work you are doing.

This plot is so whacky but I love this telenovela. I love the little kids especially too. I think we should watch these names to see what great adult actors they turn into.

Marissa has gone from eerie to really scary. I don't care for the story line that suggests she might do harm to lots of people including the baby.
 

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