HBO’s Isabel is a Powerful Look at an Influential Life | TV/Streaming


“Isabel,” like all good biopics, reveals the person behind the legend, humanizing its protagonist and reminding viewers that the path to greatness is never assured and rarely foreseen. It has plenty of literary easter eggs for the author’s fans, particularly when recounting Isabel’s childhood. And the miniseries shines in dramatizing the creative process. We see Isabel starting her writing career and floundering in her first editorial meeting, unsure of what to pitch or even where to start. At home, she gets an idea to satirize the types of (ineffectual) husbands and soon she’s scribbling away. Her editor encourages her and she grows in confidence, penning one piece after another. It’s an inspiring case study on how someone starts writing, finds inspiration, and hones their craft.

Allende’s writing is political and her life is too, with “Isabel” portraying her activism as part accident and part heroism, avoiding the temptation to lionize her. The most obvious example occurs after the assassination of Allende’s uncle, Chilean President Salvador Allende, in a coup that installed General Augusto Pinochet as Chile’s brutal dictator. Isabel goes to check on one of her colleagues from the magazine and sees the violence inflicted on him by the new regime. Worried for his life, she helps him get out of the country. And she keeps helping people escape, while knowing that doing so endangers her family, until her children are kidnapped in a warning from the state.

More than once, we see Isabel make this choice to put her goals over her children—whether it’s in resisting Pinochet or fighting for her own happiness—and I appreciate how the series doesn’t demonize or romanticize her for it. Instead, it lets these choices breathe, showing how they eventually make her the writer she becomes. Take how they portray her exile in Venezuela as a difficult but not defining period. She can’t find work there, falls into a depression, has an affair. And she abandons her kids, leaving them behind to see if she has better luck in Spain with her lover. But “Isabel” refuses to damn her for it. Yes, it shows the pain this choice wrought but it also connects it to our heroine’s later success. For it is after she returns to her family, shamed but not broken, that she begins writing her first book, La casa de los espiritus/The House of Spirits. Arguably (and “Isabel” does seem to present it this way), one thing leads to the other; her own complicated relationship to her family allows her to plumb the depths of her nation’s and personal history and turn it into a masterpiece.

You can view the original article HERE.

Tom Selleck hopes CBS execs ‘come to their senses’ and save ‘Blue Bloods’ from cancellation
Aida Rodriguez Used Comedy to Unpacking Childhood Traumas
David Archuleta’s Mom Tears Up at Music Vid About Leaving Mormon Church
Kristi Noem Admits She Never Met Kim Jong Un Despite Book Claim
The Ross Brothers Made a Road-Trip Movie. They Didn’t Come Back the Same. | Interviews
Chivalry Review | Steve Coogan & Sarah Solemani Charm in This Wicked Comedy
Emily Blunt Confesses Kissing Some of Hollywood’s Leading Men has Made Her Feel Sick
Wildcat movie review & film summary (2024)
BTS’ RM taps ‘Beef’ director, ‘Pachinko’ star Kim Minha for new MV
Will Taylor Swift Replace Katy Perry on ‘American Idol’?
‘Gen V’ will not recast Chance Perdomo’s role for season 2
Watch Pearl Jam debut ‘Dark Matter’ songs at opening night of 2024 world tour in Vancouver
Eat and Run Verification Guide in Casino
Marlins trade Arraez to Padres in 5-player deal
Jets’ Travis: I think about being Rodgers’ successor a lot
Mavs oust Clippers in 6 games, face Thunder in next round
NCIS Season 21 Episode 10 Review: Reef Madness
Dead City Set Video Sees Jeffrey Dean Morgan Reunited with a Walking Dead Icon
Tracker Season 1 Episode 11 Review: Beyond the Campus Walls
‘No One Can Replace Chance’
Somf of The Best Met Gala Looks Of All Time
Best Gifts For Men From Gap
Editor’s Pick: Lion Pose’s Ghost-Buster SPF
Inside The Star-Studded 8th Annual Fashion Los Angeles Awards