Frida (2024)

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Frida (2024)

Post by bunniefuu »

[quiet rustling, creaking]

[soft sigh]

[match strikes]

[sizzling]

[exhaling]

[object dragging, creaking]

[exhaling]

[paintbrush scraping on canvas]

[Frida Kahlo speaking Spanish] In my life, I've

only painted the honest expression of myself.

To say what I couldn't in any other way.

[brushstrokes on canvas]

I paint because I need to.

[intriguing music playing]

[lively, rhythmic music playing]



[heart thumping rhythmically]



[contemplative music playing]

Who would've thought

that stains of color can come to life

and help one live?

Mexico was my entire universe.

I was happy.

[birds chirping]

[child giggling]

I ran through every corner of my yard

and I'd shout and laugh from under a tree.

[bell tolling]

[quiet crowd chatter]

My mom was obsessively religious.

She invited priests to

hold Mass at my house

and her friends would

come to pray the rosary.

While everyone was praying

I tried not to laugh.

[lighthearted music playing]

I remember asking about the

Mysteries of the Bible.

They'd always say,

"To dedicate oneself more to God."



[crying]

But I kept bothering the priest

with questions.

How was Christ born?

Was the Virgin Mary really a virgin?

They threw me out

for spoiling it for the other kids.

[camera shutter snaps]

My father was a photographer.

I was fascinated with his studio.

Papa was an atheist

and the only one in the house who read

books about science,

geography, and history.

[wistful music playing]

I went everywhere with my father.

He would paint small

landscapes by the river

with watercolors and oil paints.



Papa kept his box of paints

tucked away in his studio.

And I really wanted that box.

[upbeat music playing]

Green

good warm light

Magenta

Aztec

Mexican red

old blood of the prickly pear

Brown

color of mol

earth

Yellow

sun and happiness

I was a girl who walked

through a world full of colors

of tangible forms.

Everything was mysterious

and held secrets.

Deciphering the world was like a game.

[fireworks whistling, popping]



I wanted to be a doctor

so I attended the National

Preparatory School.

[quiet, distant chatter]

I didn't like it at first because

I had to go upstairs with the other girls.

All the girls would say

"Frida is a little strange."

[spirited music playing]

I ended up befriending a group called

the Cachuchas.

We wore caps

and I was the only girl.



[Alejandro Gmez Arias] When Frida arrived

at the school she was rebellious

and defied tradition.

She was drawn to rebellious young men

and she joined our group.



[Frida] I followed the Cachuchas everywhere

and took part in all of their mischief.

[fireworks whistling]

[sizzling]

[popping rapidly]

[Baltasar Dromundo]

We strapped firecrackers on a dog

and we sent it into the school.

We wreaked havoc

and got all the classes suspended.

Frida was standing in a hallway

dying of laughter.

[Frida] I would go to the boys' classes

instead of going to mine.

I barely passed my classes

or I would cheat to get good grades.

[quiet, distant chatter]

Alejandro was a leader at school.

He took part in all of

the student protests.

I'm attracted to intelligent people.

I choose those I feel are superior to me.

My Alex

My beloved Alex

My Alex

[sighs]

I wanted Alejandro to f*ck me

but he preferred to tell me nice things.

He'd recite poetry

and give me kisses and hugs.

I think that everything

that gives pleasure is good.

[wistful music playing]

breath

scent

armpit

love

abyss



- [traffic passing]

- [lively chatter]

[trolley bell dinging]

[whistle blowing]

That day I took a bus with Alejandro.

I sat next to the handrail

and Alejandro sat next to me.

Shortly after getting on the bus

the crash started.

[tense music playing]

[Alejandro]

A trolley approached our bus slowly

hitting us straight in the middle.

The bus had a strange elasticity.

It bent more and more.

When it reached its breaking point

it burst into a thousand pieces.

[crashing, crackling]

[Frida] It wasn't violent

but silent.

Slow.

The handrail went through me

like a sword through a bull.

[atmospheric music playing]

It's a lie that one realizes the crash.

A lie that one cries.

I had no tears.

I didn't understand

the kind of wounds I had suffered.

I thought I came out unscathed.

[Alejandro] I ended up under the trolley.

As soon as I was able to get up

I looked for Frida.

Horrified, I realized that

a piece of iron had pierced her body.

A man said, "We need to take it out."

He put his knee on Frida's body

and pulled it out.

[siren blaring]

Frida screamed so loud

you couldn't hear the ambulance's siren.

CRASH WRECKS BUS

The doctors didn't think

they could save her.

[gentle music playing]

[Frida] It will take a long time

for the fracture in my pelvis to mend

and for the wounds in my foot to heal.

The doctor thinks

I will have to stay like this

for three or four months.

[mournful music playing]

I now inhabit a world of pain

transparent

like ice.

It no longer holds mystery.

[soft rumbling]

The crash destroyed me

but at least Lady Death didn't take me.

Everyone tells me not to despair

but no one knows what it's like for me

having been free in the

streets all my life.

[sighs]

I feel trapped by the walls in my room.

I'm alone with my soul.

My mother devised a wooden contraption

where I could attach my papers.

She also hung a mirror over my bed

so I could use myself as a model.

I started painting portraits of my friends.

[wistful music playing]

Dear Agustn

I painted your portrait with love.

Beautiful Alicia

I'm sending you all my love.

Your pal, Friducha.

Miguel, little brother

don't ever forget about Cachucha number 9

Frida Kahlo.

Alex

this is so you don't forget me.

Don't stop writing to me.

Here is my portrait, Alex.

It'll be at your house in a few days.

I beg you, hang it low

so you can see it

as if you were looking straight at me.

[leaves rustling gently in wind]

After a year in many casts

I still felt very sore

and had little strength.

But I want to be productive

with the health I have left.

- [rousing music playing]

- [lively chatter, chanting]

When the Revolution started

I was aware of what was happening.

I was four when I witnessed Zapata's

peasant fight against the establishment.



[Emiliano Zapata] The peasants took up arms

to seize the bread that the rich denied them.

Land and freedom.

[Frida] In Mexico, coraje means

becoming violent when you face injustice.

I feel the pain of the oppressed.

I feel the need to fight for them.

That's why as soon as they allowed me

to walk after the accident

I joined the Communist party.

[crowd chanting, clamoring]



MEXICAN ART REFLECTS NEW VALUES

ART AND REVOLUTION



The spirit of the Revolution

was the foundation for my determination.

[pensive music playing]

Diego Rivera was painting frescoes

at the Ministry of Education.



Diego is a communist.

His creative work is at the service of

the social revolution.

He has great taste.

He admires everything that emanates beauty

whether it comes from

a woman or a mountain.

[laughter]

I had only seen him from far away

but I admired him greatly.

One day I brought him four paintings

and just like that I said

"Diego! Get down!"

[Diego Rivera] I looked down from my

scaffold and saw a girl of about eighteen.

She had a pretty body and a delicate face.

[Frida]

Look, I haven't come to flirt with you.

Even though you're a womanizer

I've come to show you my paintings.

If you're interested, let me know.

If not, that's fine.

So I can find another

way to help my parents.

[Diego] I was impressed.

Her canvases revealed

an unusual expressive energy.

"In my opinion, you must continue

to paint," I said at once.

[Frida] He told me, "You have talent."

That's when my courtship with Diego began.

- [iLe & Natalia Lafourcade: "En Cantos"]

- [lyrics sung in Spanish]



Diego is a big kid.

His bulging eyes are never still

as if they were made for a painter.

His fleshy lips always show

a mischievous and tender smile.

[Adelina Zendejas]

She got a kick out of hearing him talk.

She'd tease him and rile him up.

[Bertram Wolfe speaking English]

I saw Diego had a new girl.

She was quite a young lady.

Almost at once, he

painted her into a mural.

"You have a dog face," he told her.

"And you," she retorted,

"have the face of a frog."

[Frida speaking Spanish]

Toad Face

[Bertram speaking English]

became her favorite name for him,

varied with the epithet...

[Frida speaking Spanish]

Fatbelly

[Bertram speaking English]

and sometimes the tenderer...

[Frida speaking Spanish]

Little Diego

[Bertram speaking English] Then he began

asking for her opinion of his own work.

Her verdict was at times quite unfavorable.

He would grumble, but the next day,

he would alter the offending detail.

[Frida speaking Spanish]

I used to dress like a boy.

But when I started seeing Diego

I put on traditional Tehuana dresses.



You will be called Auxochrome

the one who captures color.

I, Chromophore, the one that gives color.



[song ends]

DIEGO RIVERA IS MARRIED

Everyone said it was like

marrying an elephant to a dove.

[soft, romantic music playing]

I want to have a son

because this is a man's world.

I want him to look like Diego.

If I were to have a girl

I would like her to look a bit like me

but prettier.



I would go to see Diego every day

while he painted.

It pleased him to see me arrive

with food in a basket covered in flowers.

[Diego]

I was working as much as seven days a week

and 18 hours a day on

government commissions.

When an art dealer offered me a one-man show

at the Museum of Modern Art in New York

I got incredibly excited.

For an artist this is the pinnacle

of professional success.

[lively, upbeat music playing]

[ship horn blowing]

Here it is

the might

the power

the glory

the youthfulness of our lands.

[reporter speaking English] Noted

Mexican painter Diego Rivera has arrived.

[camera shutter snaps]

A petite, birdlike woman, Seora Rivera

smiled from behind her husband.

[Frida speaking Spanish]

New York is so massive

I can't believe it was built by people.

[traffic rumbling]

Our hotel is right in front of Central Park

only a block away from 5th Avenue.

Some neighborhoods in New York

are much more interesting than ours.

We went to Harlem.

It's a beautiful thing to see.

There are immigrant communities

from every part of the world.

The celebrations in Chinatown

feel like the ones in Mexico.

Full of fireworks and colors.

[quiet, indistinct chatter]

[Diego] We received a magnificent welcome

and we were feted at parties,

dinners, and receptions.

[Frida] Diego is the big sh*t here.

High society people lead

the most stupid lives.

They all spout nonsense

and brag about their millions.

You also need to own tons of dresses.

If you show up looking disheveled

they will eat you alive.

But Mexico is in style now

and all of my dresses

catch their attention.

Their jaws drop

because they're a bunch of idiots

who get excited over the dumbest things.

[pensive music playing]

Diego is painting two

blocks from our hotel.

I am also painting all the time.

I paint things that are

heavily influenced by Diego.

I've adapted to his style.

I try my best to make sure it's done well.

[Lucile Blanch speaking English]

She did small paintings with

bright Mexican colors.

But she did not ask me to look at her work.

She was a little shy about her painting.

She didn't set herself up as an artist.

She was there because

Diego Rivera was starring.

[wind howling]

[Frida speaking Spanish]

Winter here is incredibly sad.

Everything becomes white suddenly.

But people don't stop going out.

I don't leave this place.

I can't walk much with my crooked spine.

I'm always in pain.

I'm weak and tired.

[melancholy music playing]

I spend my days alone

since Diego doesn't stop

painting and painting

and must tend to his affairs.

Diego

I'm alone.

[lighthearted music playing]

[Diego] I was never a faithful husband.

I indulged my desires and had affairs.

I often found women too

desirable to resist.

I wanted the freedom to go after

anyone who caught my fancy.

Frida didn't object to my infidelity.

What offended her was when I chose women

unworthy of me or inferior to her.

[Lucile speaking English]

One time, there was a girl

who was trying to get his attention.

Frida started acting out

little, funny Mexican songs.

[laughter]



She got funnier and funnier.

She was a firework of wit and humor.

Diego then stopped paying attention

to the other girl, as she was a bore.

Frida knew the way

to break that thing up entirely.

[Frida speaking Spanish] It all made me

angry and if I'm being honest, jealous.

Why can't I get it through my head

that the affairs with all these women

the English teachers

the models

and the disciples captivated by your art

are just distractions.

Even though we fight and curse each other

it all makes me realize that

I love you more than my own skin.

And even if you don't love me the same

you must love me a little bit, right?

[camera shutter snaps]

[quiet, distant chatter]

Diego's exhibition has been a success.

Two to three thousand people go every day.

[typewriter keys clacking]

Diego's been offered a lot of new work.

So now, we're headed to Detroit.

- [typewriter bell dings]

- [spirited music playing]

[train chugging]

[train whistle blows]

All I want is to go to Mexico

but Diego has dreams of painting

the steel industry.



[train whistle blowing]

[Diego]

Detroit's Art Commission, led by Edsel Ford

invited me to paint murals

at the Detroit Institute of Arts.

It was the largest sum

I had ever been offered to paint walls.

[steam whistle blows]



[machinery clanking]

[Frida] He is in love with the factories

and the machines.

Like a child with a new toy.

[machinery clanking]

Unfortunately, Diego has to work

for these rich jerks.

He tells me that there will be

about three or four months of work here

and then we can return to Mexico.

[quiet chatter]

I'm two months pregnant.

I don't know what to do.

I don't think Diego wants to have a child.

Diego only cares about painting.

It's more important to him

than anything else in the world.

Secondly, I'm not strong.

The bus accident crushed my bones.

I doubt the baby would be healthy.

Since I still have time to make

the best decision for my health

I think I should have an abortion.

[haunting music playing]

The doctor told me I should keep the baby

instead of aborting it.

Despite my poor health, he thinks I could

have the baby with a cesarean section.

I don't know why the doctor thinks it

would be better for me to have the child.

Since abortion is illegal here

maybe he's afraid.

It's been almost two months.

Now that I think I can

withstand the pregnancy

I'm excited to have the child.

[upbeat march playing]

[Lucienne Bloch speaking English]

When I arrived there around July 4th,

Frida said, "I'm pregnant."

She was very happy.

[fireworks popping]

It was about 3:00 in the morning.

Diego comes walking in looking disheveled.

He said, "Come quick.

Frida has a hemorrhage."

[somber music playing]

I rushed into her bedroom,

and she was lying there.

It was just about the deepest

puddle of blood I ever saw.

She looked so tiny, 12 years old.

Her dress is wet with tears.

Out of the pools of blood she had made,

I heard the worst cries of despair.



[Frida speaking Spanish]

I miscarried in the blink of an eye.

The fetus didn't form.

It was disintegrated.

Who knows what the hell

is wrong with my body?

I had been so excited to have a

little Diego that I cried so much.

They took me to Ford Hospital.

The doctor didn't tell me what caused it.

I don't know why I miscarried.

[Lucienne speaking English] She begged

the doctor to let her have a medical book.

She wanted to know exactly

how that fetus looked.

She even wanted to have the real fetus,

and the doctor wouldn't do that.

"I can't give you any books."

And then Diego spoke to the doctor

very seriously and said...

[Diego] You're not dealing

with an average person here.

She will do something with it.

She will do something in art.

[dramatic music playing]

[thunder crashes]

[rain falling]

[thunder crashes]

[Frida speaking Spanish]

I became obsessed with starting over.

Painting things as I saw them

through no one else's eyes

but my own.

My feelings

my moods

and my profound reactions to life.

[heart thumping rhythmically]



The only thing I know

is that I paint because I need to.

How I wish to leave this place.

I want to run and run

until I get to Mexico.

[Diego] Frida would rather be in Mexico

but I like the United States.

I'm happier here.

[reporter speaking English]

Rockefeller Center, a city within a city.

Twelve acres of mighty white buildings

reaching to the sky.

[Diego speaking Spanish] Nelson Rockefeller wanted

the best artists to beautify his new RCA building.

[upbeat music playing]

[Frida speaking Spanish] I am completely

disappointed with the famous United States.

Everything here is about appearances

but deep down it's a pile of sh*t.

I've seen thousands of people

in the most terrible conditions

without anything to eat

and nowhere to sleep.

[Diego] Rockefeller was fully acquainted

with my communist ideas.

[camera shutter snaps]

DIEGO RIVERA WITH HIS WIFE AND ASSISTANTS

I was painting a revolutionary mural

with workers marching and singing

and a figure of Lenin.

I was quite aware that I was

going against public opinion.

The private police at Radio City

gave me the order to stop work.

My mural was smashed to pieces.

[Frida] Stuck-up gringos.

m*therf*ckers. Sons of b*tches.

[Diego]

Because of the conflict with Rockefeller

all my commissions in the United States

were canceled.

[airplane whirring]

[birds chirping]

[Frida] Diego blames me for coming back

to godforsaken Mexico

but I know it's not my fault.

He has no desire to work

and gets angry a lot.

It's painful that he thinks I'm to blame.

[ship horn blowing]

[reporter speaking English] Mexico is

about the only land that will have him.

So here he is, Trotsky,

landing at Tampico with his wife.

Once Lenin's partner

and commander of the Red Army,

Trotsky finds a refuge.

[Diego speaking Spanish] I was instrumental

in bringing Trotsky to Mexico

after every country in the world

had closed its doors.

I was sick when Trotsky arrived

so I asked Frida to welcome him

and his wife at the dock.

[intriguing music playing]

[Jean van Heijenoort speaking English]

In her relations with Trotsky,

Frida quickly adopted

a certain freedom of manner.

She was very attentive.

Trotsky, who was taken by Frida,

began writing letters to her.

He'd slip a letter into a book

and give the book to her,

often in the presence of others.

Diego had no inkling of what was going on.

[Frida speaking Spanish] I dedicate this

painting to Leon Trotsky with all my affection.

[Ella Wolfe speaking English] After

six months, she got bored with the man.

[Frida speaking Spanish]

I'm so tired of this old man.

[Ella speaking English] There was

a nine-page letter from Trotsky to Frida

begging her not to break relations

and that life without her

would be very sad and sort of empty.

It was a plea.

The kind of plea

that a young love of the age of 17

would make to somebody he loved.

[Jean sighs] Frida.

[speaking English] She was

one of the great women of my life.

There is no question that she had

very strong sexual needs.

[laughter]

Once, she told me that

her view of life was...

[Frida speaking Spanish]

Make love, take a bath

and make love again.

[birds chirping]

[gentle, sensual music playing]

For me to fall in love

the person has to be sensitive

and above all, I must be

sexually attracted to them.

An affair lasts as long

as it gives pleasure.

It's good to have sex

even if one is not in love.

During sex, my breasts play an active role.

I get excited when they are touched.

Nachito, I would like to spend

more time with you all on our own.

[speaking English] I like you

very much, Georgia.

[speaking Spanish]

Jacqueline, I have not forgotten you.

The nights are long and punishing.

Bartol, last night I felt as if wings

caressed my entire body.

As if your fingertips were lips

that kissed my skin.

[speaking English] Oh, my darling Nick.

I adore you.

Believe me, like I never loved anyone.



This painting was done for you.

Remember that I exist in this planet.

[speaking Spanish]

Love is the foundation of all life.

[kisses]

[laughter]

[Lucienne speaking English] Diego approved

of Frida having relationships with women.

One day, he said to me, laughing...

[Diego] You know Frida is

a h*m*, don't you?

Women are more sensitive.

Therefore, two women together will have

the most extraordinary sexual experience.

[Isamu Noguchi] Since Diego was

well-known to be a lady chaser,

she could not be blamed

if she saw some men.

It wasn't quite acceptable

to Diego, however.

[somber, atmospheric music playing]

I was in love with her.

And I used to have assignations with her

here and there.

Diego came by with a g*n.

He always carried a g*n.

He showed me his g*n, and he said,

"Next time I see you,

I'm going to sh**t you."

Diego was insanely jealous.



[Diego speaking Spanish] The more I loved

a woman the more I wanted to hurt her.

Frida was the main victim

of this disgusting trait.

I got involved with Frida's best friend

her sister, Cristina.

[Frida] We were four sisters

but Cristina was the sister

that I loved the most

and who I tried to help whenever I could.

Cristina is really pretty.

As a child, I was very jealous of her.

We would fight furiously.

But she was my everything.

I know that right now Diego is more

interested in my sister than me.

It's all a load of crap.

I can't forgive him.

And that is all.

[tense, dramatic music playing]

Love

Hate

Madness



I spend my days crying with rage.

I'm just like any other girl

heartbroken by a man leaving her.

I'm worthless.

I can't do anything right.

My situation is so idiotic

that I hate myself for it.



[Diego] Once Frida found out, she left me.

It was too late.

But if given another chance

I can't say I'd do anything differently.

Every man is a product of his times

and I am what I am.

[Frida] I wanted to go to New York

but I had no money.

Now I live somewhere else.

Diego drops by once in a while

but we have nothing to say.

There is no connection between us anymore.

He doesn't tell me about his life.

He's not interested in what I do or think.

[Diego]

I loved her too much to make her suffer.

So to prevent future heartaches

I pleaded with her to give me a divorce.

[melancholy music playing]

[Frida] Today I signed the divorce papers

and I feel lousy because I truly love him.

- [heart thumping rhythmically]

- [waves sloshing gently]

But I think this will finally give him

what he wants.

I will no longer be a burden

keeping him from the freedom he demands.



After a few months I forgave my sister

and I'm trying my best

to forget what happened and live.

[optimistic music playing]

I'm learning to be alone

and that is a small triumph.

I've wasted my best years

being dependent on a man

without doing anything for myself.

I need to paint so I can make a living.

Then I will be free.

I no longer accept

a damn cent from Diego.

I will never accept money

from any man until I die.

I paint myself

because I'm what I know best.

My self-portraits are the true expression

of my emotions.

I was told not to paint so many sad things

but I will paint whatever I want

even if the paintings don't sell.

[barks]

For the first time in my life

I sold one of my pieces.

I now have a commission to paint

a self-portrait with monkeys.

It seems that everyone wants monkeys.

I don't know why.

[soft chittering]

[intriguing music playing]

The Surrealist poet Andr Breton

came to Mexico.

[Andr Breton speaking English] On my

arrival in Mexico, my eyes remained closed

to the perfect nobility

and terrible poverty

of the Indian people

in the sun-drenched marketplaces.

I had not yet set eyes on Frida Kahlo.

Like a fairy-tale princess,

with magic spells at her fingertips.

My surprise was unbounded when I discovered

that her work had blossomed forth

into pure surreality

despite the fact that it had been conceived

without any prior knowledge whatsoever

of the ideas motivating the activities

of my friends and myself.

[Frida speaking Spanish]

I never knew I was a Surrealist

until Andr Breton came to Mexico

and told me I was one.

I must confess I didn't even know

that this art movement existed.

[Andr speaking English] Surrealism is

the omnipotence of dreams.

We are privileged to be present

at the entry of a young woman

endowed with all the gifts of seduction,

one accustomed to the society

of men of genius.

The art of Frida Kahlo

is a ribbon around a b*mb.

[soft rumbling]

[Frida speaking Spanish]

I adore surprises and the unexpected.

But I never painted my dreams.

I painted my own reality.

Breton was so impressed with my work he

urged me to exhibit in Paris and New York.

[peppy music playing]

A Surrealist gallery in New York

invited me to do a solo exhibition.

I've never had an exhibition before.

[reporter speaking English] The flutter

of the week in Manhattan was caused

by the first exhibition of paintings

by Frida Kahlo.

Little Frida's pictures had the playful

bloody fancy of an unsentimental child.

[Frida speaking Spanish]

Everything went wonderfully.

I displayed 25 pieces and sold 12.

From there I went to Paris for an

exhibition organized by Andr Breton.



[bicycle bell dings]

Ever since I arrived,

it's been a sh*t show.

My exhibition wasn't even set up.

My paintings were waiting patiently for me

in customs.

The son-of-a-bitch Breton

hadn't even gone to pick them up.

Now Breton wants to exhibit my paintings

along with common objects

he bought in Mexican markets.

Ordinary crap.

It's all junk.

The exhibition will finally open

at the Pierre Colle gallery.

They say it's one of the best ones here.

[quiet, distant chatter]

There was quite a crowd at the opening.

Huge congratulations from Joan Mir.

Great praise from Kandinsky.

And congratulations from Picasso

and other big cacas of Surrealism.

But these rich b*tches

don't want to buy anything.

I don't have the honor of being

in the elite circle of famous artists.

Men are kings.

They rule the world.

[contemplative music playing]

These people make me want to vomit.

They sit in the cafs for hours

warming their precious asses.

They talk endlessly about "culture"

"art" and "revolution."

They poison the air

with theories that never come true.

I hate Surrealism.

It's a decadent manifestation

of bourgeois art.

I am so sick of the whole affair.

To hell with everything.

f*ck everything concerning Breton

and this lousy place.

Let them eat sh*t.

I am going home.

I feel like hell.

Exhausted by the constant pain in my back

that gets worse every day.

[somber music playing]

I am f*cked because of the accident.

My foot always hurts.

The nerves are damaged

and my foot will never be the same.

It's hopeless.

[soft rumbling]

All the doctors want me

to have an operation.

I'm scared.

[water burbling]

In the end, they proceeded to break bones.

They tore off a piece of my pelvis

and fused it to my spine.

- [wheels creaking softly]

- [wind blowing]

The bone will take a long time

to grow and readjust.

I'll have to stay in this hospital

for quite a while.

It is hard to imagine my future.

I can't think about it until I get well.

Tree of hope, stay strong.

[lively chatter]

[Diego]

Frida, I haven't known how to say this.

I've never been able to admit

how much I love you

but now I'm sure of it.

Little girl, I'm terribly worried

about your illness.

[Frida] He tells me I am the woman

he loves above everyone else

and he wants me to marry him again.

[Diego] I loved her and I

begged her to marry me again

but without success.

When she finally accepted

she did so with conditions.

That she would support herself

with the earnings of her own work.

That I would only pay for half

of our home expenses.

And that we wouldn't

have sex with each other.

When explaining this

last condition, she said

[Frida] When I imagine you with all your

other women I can't make love to you.

As soon as you start seducing me

I face a psychological barrier.

[Diego] I felt so happy to have her back

that I accepted all of her conditions.

Frida and I got married for a second time.

[uplifting music playing]

[birds chirping]

[Frida] Our second marriage is going well.

There is more mutual understanding.

No more jealousy or violent arguments.

Each spouse does their part

to maintain the home.

We'll be together forever.

Nothing but love between us.

[wistful music playing]

[fire whooshing, crackling]

My little boy

I will build you a home

with all of my love.



I'm now teaching at an art school.

And in the afternoons I dedicate myself

to the beauty of painting.

As soon as I finish one I have to sell it to

earn enough money for the monthly expenses.

If it weren't for my health

you could even say that I'm happy.

[birds chirping]

Up until 1950, I was doing well enough.

But now my health is at its worst.

[optimistic music playing]

[Alejandro]

Frida became a professional patient.

She had many surgical interventions

a parade of doctors and orthopedic braces.

They would hang her to

straighten her spine.

[Frida] This is my reality.

There is no remedy.

Despite it all

nothing is better than laughter.

Laughing hard gives you strength.

[Dr. Guillermo Velasco y Polo] At the

hospital, Frida made light of her pain

and swore all the time.

[Frida] f*cking life.

[Diego] If she saw me with

a pretty woman, she'd say

[Frida] Pass her to me. I'll take a puff.



I'm always in a cast

but I'm not discouraged.

I have an enormous will to live.

Long live life!

- [soft, melancholy music playing]

- [birds chirping]

I'm sure they will amputate my right leg.

I don't know the details

but my doctors are concerned.



- [pencil scratching paper]

- [wind blowing softly]

I'm an invalid.

Now I am trapped

in this f*cking house of oblivion.

Yellow

sickness

fear

All the ghosts wear this color.

Red

blood

Black

Nothing is black

truly nothing.

[breathes deeply]

I want to die.

[Judith Ferreto]

After the operation to amputate her leg

everything was silent.

Not even Diego's presence helped

and she didn't want to paint at all.

The doctor said

not to force her to do anything

because she didn't want to live anymore.

But one morning, she

looked up at me and said

[Frida] I think I'm going to paint.

[Judith] I had to bind her to her

wheelchair so she could sit up straight.

[match strikes]

[inhales]

[exhales heavily]

[Frida] In my life I've painted little

without the slightest desire

for glory or ambition

with the sole conviction

to give myself pleasure

and the power to make

a living with my trade.

I've lost so many things

I wanted for my life.

But painting completed my life.



[Lola lvarez Bravo] I told Diego it was an outrage that

we had never held an exhibition for Frida in Mexico

and what would he say about

holding one in my gallery.

EXHIBITION OF FRIDA KAHLO'S

BODY OF WORK

-[cheering and applause]

- [gentle music playing]

[Diego] She arrived in an ambulance

like a heroine.

Frida sat in the middle of the room.

She was pleased to see so many people

honoring her warmly.

She said almost nothing.

She must have realized

she was bidding life goodbye.

[Frida] I am not afraid of death.

Even so, I must face the bitter fact

that having many lives

would still not be enough

for me to paint everything I want.

What is joy?

The creation born of discovery.

[spirited music playing]

The lonely deer wandered

very sad and very hurt

until it found warmth and a home.

When the deer returns

strong, happy and healed

the wounds he now bears

will all have been erased.

Thank you for giving me solace.

In the deer's forest, the sky is now clear.

[Marissa Mur and Luis Jimenez: "Amores"]

[song continues with

lyrics sung in Spanish]

[song ends]
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