Pop Culture Happy Hour - Kiss of the Spider Woman
Episode Date: October 13, 2025Jennifer Lopez stars in the new film adaptation of Kiss of the Spider Woman. Set in an Argentine prison, one man (Tonatiuh) tells his cellmate (Diego Luna) the story of his favorite old Hollywood musi...cal, starring the silver screen goddess he worships – that’s J. Lo. The musical is packed with glitz, glamour and songs written by Kander and Ebb, the minds behind Cabaret and Chicago.Follow Pop Culture Happy Hour on Letterboxd at letterboxd.com/nprpopcultureSee pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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You know the musicals Cabaret in Chicago with songs by Kander and Ebb.
You probably don't know their musical Kiss of the show.
The Spider Woman, though. Now's your chance to check it out. There's a new adaptation in theaters
starring Jennifer Lopez and Diego Luna. In an Argentinian prison, one man tells us Selmaid
the story of his favorite old Hollywood musical, starring the Silver Screen goddess he worships.
That's Jaylo. I'm Aisha Harris. And I'm Glenn Weldon, and today we're talking about Kiss
of the Spider Woman on Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR. Joining us today is entertainment journalist
Christina Escobar. She's the co-founder and editor-in-chief of LatinaMedia.com.
Hey, Christina.
Hello, hello.
Welcome, welcome.
Also, this is NPR producer Corey Antonio Rose.
Welcome back, Corey Antonio.
Oh, glad to be where you are, Glenn.
Glad to have you here.
Kiss of the Spider Woman takes place in Argentina, 1983.
Diego Luna plays Valentin, a revolutionary, imprisoned and tortured by the military dictatorship.
A new inmate arrives to share his cell, a queer windowdresser named Melina.
He's played by Tonotil.
Melina idolizes Ingrid Luna, a classic Hollywood movie star, played by J-Lo.
His favorite movie of hers is a musical called Kiss of the Spider Woman,
in which she plays both the leading lady Aurora and the villain,
a jungle spirit known as the Spider Woman.
Night after night, Molina regales Valentin, with the story of the movie,
and we see that movie come to life in glorious, melodramatic technicolor,
with J-Lo, Luna, and Tonotilla playing the key roles.
Kiss of the Spider Woman is an adaptation of the 1993 Broadway musical
written by Terrence McNally, with songs by John Kender and Fred Ebb.
It represents the first time this story, which has been a book, a stage play, a movie,
and a Broadway musical has been presented with an all-latin cast.
It was directed by Bill Condon, who directed Dreamgirls.
Yay!
And the live-action Beauty and the Beast.
Boo!
It's in theaters now.
Christina, did you get caught in her web?
Yes, I did get caught.
I absolutely did.
You know, going into this film,
with these huge Latino stars knowing we don't get that many shots at this type of film,
I was nervous.
And about halfway through the movie, I was really nervous because there's all these changes in tones.
It switches between this dark, gray, dreary prison cell and this beautiful, bright,
technicolor experience.
And switching is difficult as an audience.
It's difficult to care about both places.
It's difficult to toggle and hold the emotional threads.
But I want to say, by the third act, they had gotten me.
They had gotten me emotionally.
I felt like the performances really came together.
You know, there are some tropes about how LGBTQ folks are portrayed and the sort of access
to happiness that, you know, can be problematic.
But I also want to say that like the love story in this is portrayed beautifully.
in a way that still feels radical,
something we don't see on screen very often.
And by the end, they just totally had me
and I walked away buzzing, thrilled.
Okay.
Corey and Tony, what do you make of Christina's thoughts
about the shifts in tone?
They are dramatic.
You know, the musical, the stage musical,
is very much not structured the same way as the film
where you're kind of unsure, is this reality,
is this fantasy, what are we looking at?
And I thought that it worked really well to not only separate the two landscapes, the Argentinian prison and this technicolor fantasy land.
But I thought that also just like taking out the singing prisoners and a lot of the campier elements of the original musical in favor of sort of these darker, bleaker moments where we really see the harsh realities of being in a prison in the 80s.
in Argentina.
I thought that it really elevated the storytelling,
and it took me out of the space.
Usually, kiss of the spider woman,
I'm like, what is going on?
Who is this lady?
Are we watching the film?
Are we watching the film of the film?
Are we watching the musical of the film of the musical?
But there were no questions with this viewing,
which I really appreciated.
It felt like they were taking all of the haze off of the story.
Yeah, I think that consciousness
actually works in its favor.
I agree.
Glenn, I'm pretty sure that there's going to be at least one or two people listening to this
who are already, you know, spinning their web and want to entrap you for saying that this show is
not memorable, does not have memorable music.
I, for one, agree with you.
But I think the fact that this show does not have its mine hair, it doesn't have its
all that jazz.
It doesn't have that one standout song.
There is one song that is sung in a prison.
That one is Dear One, Carito, which that is sung by a couple of prisons.
We don't ever see those prisoners again.
And it comes in a really emotional moment.
It's also very brief.
But other than that, I think because we have that separation,
why it works is that once we go to these escapist places
and it's J-Lo and its beautiful costumes
and you're giving us singing in the rain and get happy from Summer Stock
and all these little, you know, nods to old classic Hollywood movies, that makes me more forgiving of the songs being not memorable because I'm just like, it appeals to me in the same way that I think it's supposed to appeal to the character of Molina, which is it is pure escapism.
Like, I don't have to actually like remember these songs. I do remember the visuals. And they serve as an escape within this world that I think helps to balance those tones and works really well.
And, you know, I think Tony Tiu and Diego Luna, they are the emotional core.
And I think that to me, even though the music is not great, and it's challenging all of my beliefs that, like, in order for a musical to succeed, the musical numbers need to be good.
I think that the fact that their relationship grows and changes and shifts and is so complex is what makes this movie succeed for me.
And I really, really enjoyed it.
Okay.
So I have thoughts about the songs, as you might imagine.
But first we've got to talk about the people who are singing them.
I want to say, from the gate, Tonotio is the real thing.
They are a star.
They clean up really well, especially when they have to play the role in the musical,
their mannerisms and diction switch into old Hollywood.
They fit right in, and they move like a musical theater star, which is important.
If they, at any point in a dance number, have to extend a hand to J-Lo,
they do it with the flourish and precision of a true.
trained dancer in a way that Diego Luna, I love Diego Luna.
He's a naturalistic film actor. That's his training. He has trouble kind of locking in.
And he lives in the close-ups, but if there is a long shot, if there's a dance number and he extends a hand to J-Lo, he's basically a thrust in a hamhawk in her face.
You know, he's not trained for this. You can't get a lifetime of theater dance training in the time it takes to prep for one movie.
J-Lo locks into the dancing, of course. And of course, the internet being the internet, has our
already had their say. There was an interview on CBS Sunday morning where she said she
thinks she has a voice more suited to the theater and that being the internet said,
girl, you've got a voice more suited to dancing in the theater, but let's be real.
I would disagree with Aisha.
Musicals live or die by the songs. They are the engine. They are the structure. They are
the story. And I think they're lacking here. Talk to me about them. To be clear, I agree with
that, but this movie has challenged me. That's what I'm saying, Glenn. But yes, continue.
Continue.
I went and listened to the soundtrack of this film twice in preparation for this.
And it is not something that I recommend.
It was rough.
It was rough.
The songs are not standalone numbers.
I think J-Lo does fine.
I think Diego Luna can't really sing.
God bless his heart for putting himself out there.
He does great in that acting portion of this.
Absolutely.
The close-ups.
Yep.
Mm-hmm.
But I feel like the film.
does still work because, as Aisha said, the music is in many ways separate. It's not as integral.
It's a escape, a dip out of reality. And like, maybe it would work a little better if even one of
the songs was something you could hum afterwards. But they're not. They're kind of like old,
musical, timely, like little silly things. And, you know, it is what it is. They feel like kind of
background, nothing. Oh, wow. Oh, wow.
I mean, I think that the problem with this film is that the way the songs are packaged, the delivery is not memorable.
And when I listen to the Vanessa Williams cast recording, it sticks with me. It's cute. It lives up to a musical theater standard.
I think the problem is that there are no phenomenal voices in this production in this film except for Tona Tiu.
Yeah.
And that makes these songs not memorable because there are no long notes held.
There is no real vibrato.
Everything does have that studio clean finish,
and you don't get that moment that you get
in some of Bill Condon's other musicals.
I'm thinking of Dreamgirls, Jennifer Hudson,
this time Effie White is going to win.
Yeah.
Like, there are no moments where you're like,
oh, I am watching musical theater on film
from the vocal perspective.
You get that from the dancing.
You get that from the beautiful gowns.
The wings.
Careful.
And I think I think one of the things I left the theater thinking was, wow, J-Lo, beautiful gowns, transcendent dancing.
Yeah.
The vocal was never going to be there.
Yeah.
Sorry.
Noted I need to listen to the Vanessa Williams cast album because I also listened to the Cheetah Rivera original.
And I love Cheetah.
She was a legend.
Let's not get this.
But like that cast album is not doing anything for me in the same way.
This is not doing it.
And we're not in the same way, but in a different way.
Like, Chita Rivera, she was a triple threat.
Now, was she a singer along the lines of, like, I don't know, Barbara Streisand or what, like, no, but like, she has a very powerful voice and she could use it.
When you think about some of the biggest Hollywood musical stars of the Golden Era, Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly, like, they couldn't really sing.
Like, their voices were limited, but they knew how to sell a song.
They could use their voice in the limited capacity to sell the song.
And Jalo, I love her dancing.
Beautiful.
Looks great.
But she's not up to selling these songs in the way they need to be sold.
And she has quite a few songs.
She has a lot of songs.
It's not like she just has one or two.
So I think it's notable that she shows up here and she is only in the fantasy world.
She does not appear, at least not like in a real way in the real world.
And so I think it's really interesting because she is the marquee name here,
but she is not the star.
And that's a choice.
And I think the choice, it both suits her, but also I wish we had someone who could sell these songs a little bit better.
Jana Jackson could have did this.
But that would have been a whole different thing.
That's a whole different thing.
That's a whole different.
I don't know if these songs are easy to sell.
I'm here to tell you that I approach this like Christina.
I listen to these numbers, this whole soundtrack and other soundtracks before, during and after this movie, hoping that, because sometimes you walk out of it.
of a theater and you're not humming anything.
And sometimes it just takes, you know, some songs,
more listens to worm their way into your brain.
I gave him plenty of opportunities, nothing did.
I just, all I kept hearing was the simplicity,
which surprises me from the folks who did cabaret in Chicago and even the rink.
I mean, I notice it in the lyrics because I don't know anything about music.
But again and again, these songs land so hard on the terminal rhyme of each line,
which is what you have to do, I guess.
But you know exactly what the next line is going to.
to be. If you hear Tides Low Eb, you know that caught in her web is coming around the corner.
And the magic of a musical number is that those rhymes are there to provide the structure and the form,
but also to reassure you that there's craft involved here, right? That we got your back. But if they
never surprise you, if they never bring you up short, if they never go beyond the first draft,
like first entry in the rhyming dictionary, you're left with meet street, miss kiss, gloom,
his kiss. You're always one step ahead of the lyrics, which isn't satisfying because every
musical phrase gets resolved as precisely as you expected to. So tension gets introduced and immediately
reduced, and nobody comes to art, musicals included, to have our expectations precisely met.
God, I needed some out of left field something here. The songs are not where this movie is going to
deliver that for you. Like, they're just not. And like, you know, I hear you all comparing it to
Bill Condon's past works, which I think is fair. But when I was watching,
it, I was comparing it to Emilia Perez, which is the other big, like, quote-unquote Latino
movie musical awards juggerna thing. I forgot about that movie already. Yeah, I wish I had to.
Wanted to forget about this movie? And watching it compared to that, like none of those songs
were humable. And this movie had an emotional core. It had something to say about what it was
to be in a certain place in time in Latin America. It had representation that felt mean.
in a way that just resonated off-screen into Antonio's performance.
And also Diego Luna's continuing playing of this revolutionary.
Like, there were notes that sang out from this film.
Maybe saying isn't the right verb that reverberated.
Okay.
From this film into the real world that made it more powerful and more strong
in a way that like that other film that we can forget about just didn't, right?
and that's where the meat of the film is,
you've got to kind of just let the songs go.
But that's hard for a musical.
This is the thing.
It's a musical.
Especially because this has already been a book,
a stage play, a film.
Maybe this is just an exception.
But I guess I'm able to overlook the songs
because of that central story.
And for me,
what I liked about this adaptation is that
even though it is set in 1983
and it's set in the past
And it feels as though it's in touch with sort of our current sensibilities, especially when it comes to, Christina, you kind of hinted at earlier.
But there's this idea around like queer stereotypes. And, you know, Molina is very proudly apolitical. So he says. And is like obsessed with divas and is like basically a walking stereotype. And then you have, of course, the Valentin character. And they're clashing. And what I found interesting was how it feels.
feels very much in conversation with something we're talking about now, which is like, whether
you're queer, whether you're black or a person of color, like, how much do we put into this
idea of like resisting, quote unquote, everything that's happening through pop culture and art and
like putting all of our energy into that. Like, I'm going out dancing. I'm resisting. And it's like a fraught
conversation. And I feel like this movie in many ways. And this is like a common thread throughout
every iteration of this. But it feels especially like it wants to be in conversation with that
idea now. And I kind of like the way that played out in this film. And I'm curious how that
kind of struck you all in terms of its discussion around art as resistance or art is just a way
of like expressing yourself and attaching yourself to that. Yeah. I think there's definitely something to
be said in the film about the power of art to really heal you. And I can't experience Kiss of the
Spider-Woman without making comparisons to the drowsy chaperone because I feel like thematically
there is something there
where it's like
those songs that you are supposed to leave a musical
going back to with your head
those stick with you and those are there
for your times of duress,
for your times of peril where you can have
something to lean on. And I think
that I didn't catch
as many
stereotypes
in my viewing of the film. I thought that
Molina, Tona Tuna Tew's performance
as Malina, was actually
incredibly nuanced for the
stage of queerness that they were embodying as far as when I walked into the theater,
maybe two minutes in, I was like, oh, that's not a boy.
They don't carry themselves like a boy.
They don't move through the world as a boy.
That's not a boy.
And without spoiling too much, like, that is made evident within like the first 15 minutes
of the film.
They're like, oh, I want to be a woman.
But to be able to portray that part of your transition where you know,
that if you had the resources to get what you needed to get done, done,
you know how it would look, you know how it would feel,
you know how it would move on you.
And I found that to be incredibly enthralling in the film
because they found a way to tie that concept
to this idea of diva worship.
And it gave it something past just like,
oh, gay men love divas.
And she became a possibility model in this place where, you know,
Molina is literally experiencing psychosexual torture
at the hands of these guards,
at the hands of the ward and what have you.
And I don't know.
I just found it delicious.
I loved it.
He doesn't just stand with Jennifer Lopez and Diego Luna.
He owns this production.
Oh, this is his movie.
It is his through and through.
And he kills it.
You are with him every step of the way.
I don't think that he is a stereotype.
He is able to really embody something that feels fresh and beautiful.
And his love story with Diego Luna and how that is portrayed and how it grows feels really subversive in this moment that we're into habit portrayed in that way where a traditionally masculine type guy falls for him feels great.
It feels wonderful and affirming and just really lovely.
And I think that's where the power of this film is.
Yeah, definitely the power is in that relationship in Tonatio himself.
And also, one of the other reasons I'm going to be recommending this film, even though I think the songs just lay there, is the orchestration, the chorial.
All the stuff that's supposed to evoke these old Hollywood musicals, they're firmly in place.
Because on one level, that's kind of a bit, right?
We're not parodying these old musicals per se, but we are leaning into the excess of it all.
There's so many harp arpeggios.
You mentioned the big brassy horns.
It's melodramatic.
It's over the top because it has to be because it's doing work, right?
We need to understand why Molina is obsessed with this movie and this woman.
We are seeing it through his eyes.
So all of that lushness can be simultaneously kind of silly and funny, but it's serving the story.
It's serving the characters.
And the look of this thing in those musical moments, there's a scene near the end where the main characters confront the spider woman and it's in the jungle with mist and it's clearly a set.
It's clearly a soundstage because, of course, it needs to be.
Because everything about that setup, that blocking, the framing of it is absolutely pitch perfect.
Could have been lifted out of a 1940s Lupe Velez movie.
And not for nothing.
That also ties into the fact that there's not an infinite budget for this movie, right?
This film was made outside the studio system.
That means the sets don't disappear into the distance.
There is a definite analog quality that is necessary because that's what this movie is about.
Because they're paying homage to a B movie, right?
The movie that if you went to the movies in the 30s or 40s,
it's the second half of the double feature, right?
The movies of Dolores Del Rio and Lupe Belize,
Latin stars that didn't get the huge budgets and the huge promotions from the studios,
but were always kind of in the wings to be employed like this and to make movies like this.
And I think that's working so well that even though I couldn't hum a tune if you paid me,
I still recommend this movie a lot.
Yeah.
Tell us what you think about Kiss of the Spider Woman if you're feeling at the Tides Low Eb.
You can find us on the world.
World Wide Web and Facebook and Letterboxed.
And that brings us to the end of our show.
Christina Escobar, Corey, Antonio Rose, Aisha Harris.
Thanks so much for being here.
Thank you.
Thank you for having us.
And just a reminder that signing up for Pop Culture Happy Hour Plus is a great way to support our show.
In public radio, you get to listen to all of our episodes sponsor-free.
So please go find out more at Plus.npr.org.
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This episode was produced by Carly Rubin, Jenei Morris, and Mike Kansif,
and edited by our showrunner, Jessica Reedy.
Come In provides our theme music.
Thank you for listening to Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR.
I'm Glenn Weldon, and we'll see you all next time.
