Huevos de oro, erotic drama, Spain, 1993; D: Bigas Luna, S: Javier Bardem, Maribel VerdĂș, Maria de Medeiros, Elisa Touati, Raquel Bianca, Alessandro Gassmann, Benicio Del Toro
Melilla. Benito and Miguel work as construction workers, but Benito breaks all contact with him after findout out his girlfriend Rita is having an affair with Miguel. Benito decides to become and architect and build the tallest building in the enclave, and thus uses his new girlfriend Claudia to seduce a banker to have cash for his investment. That fails, so Benito instead marries the banker's daughter Marta. A loan shark, Gil, adds another half of amount, which is enough to start the construction of Benito's building. However, Marta finds out about Benito's girlfriend Claudia. While driving angry, Benito has a car crash which kills Claudia and leaves his right hand partially paralyzed. Gil backs out, and thus the construction is halted. Benito finds a new girlfriend, Ana, and goes with her to Miami. He leads a boring life, and cries after finding out she cheats on him with the gardener Bob.
The director Bigas Luna tackles in this film his often theme of a person's two main driving forces that mean the world to them: their love life and their dream. In "Golden Balls", the protagonist is architect Benito (very good Javier Bardem) who pursues these two goals, reaches them, but then falls, undergoes a slump in life and ends in a disappointment. Chaotic and messy, where the story isn't that much important as just observing the interactions of these characters, "Golden Balls" once again shows Luna's enchantment with sexuality and erotic sophistication, which enchants even the viewers: he is strange and wild, but his movies always feel alive, full of vibrant energy, optimism and celebration of life. The Hispanic world seems to have a natural sense for sensuality. Luna's focus is on the passionate people who express their emotions through affectionate eroticism, which gives them meaning in life, and not so much the film structure or the style. Several passionate moments thus stand out: for instance, Benito draws rectangles with a marker around Claudia's breasts and abdomen area, and later on lies down on bed, while she "sits" on top of his face, as he is giving her oral sex and holding her butt, causing her to say: "Last time someone did that to me, I fell in love!"
Bizarrely, when Claudia has sex with Benito, she has a peculiarity that he is not allowed to touch her breasts, since they are great and she doesn't want them "deformed". When Benito's wife Marta encounters Claudia, they both realize they have his rectangulars drawn on their bodies, and then Benito has both of them lie down on bed, side to side, as he stands above them, joking: "I wish I had two dicks!" A fascinating specific is that this is a rare film depiction of Melilla, the Spanish enclave in north Africa, displaying mental traits of these inhabitants and their behavior, but also human nature in general (upon meeting, Claudia is reluctant to be Benito's girlfriend, all until he asks: "Do you want to be my secretary?"), whereas Luna even adds a surreal touch in one dream sequence (a woman's black pubic hair "blends" with black ants swarming around it) that is, though, unnecessary and disruptive for the rest of the film, which is rather "normal" in its format. Maribel Verdu is excellent as Claudia, as well as Elisa Touati as Rita, though the latter has much less screen time. Despite its seemingly wild and naughty tone, "Golden Balls" even has a tragic-emotional side: Benito starts off as an underclass worker whose girlfriend cheats on him. This causes an outburst of rebellion as he sets out to start a new life and rise up the hierarchy. However, in the last act, Benito returns back to the same situation, just in a different setting, and breaks down, signaling the inevitability of fatalism.
Grade:+++