Strange: Way Of Life

Almodóvar deliberately imports the aesthetic and emotional register of melodrama—a genre he has masterfully refined in films like All About My Mother and Talk to Her —into the sun-bleached, masculine world of the Western. Where John Wayne’s Ethan Edwards in The Searchers internalizes every wound, Jake and Silva externalize theirs. The film’s centerpiece is a dinner conversation that plays like a therapy session in chaps. Silva asks, “What kind of life is this? Always alone, always moving.” Jake responds not with action but with confession: “I think of you every day.”

In its final minutes, Strange Way of Life offers two endings. The first is generic: Jake, true to his duty, arrests Silva’s son, and the two men part, presumably forever. The second is emotional: after the son is taken away, Silva returns to Jake’s house, and they share a night together, suggesting that the “strange way of life” might be transformed into a domestic one. Almodóvar leaves the outcome ambiguous, refusing to fully collapse the genre’s conventions. However, by centering the entire narrative on the question of whether two men can choose love over solitude, he accomplishes something radical: he makes the Western’s heart visible. The film argues that the cowboy’s loneliness was never a necessity—only a choice enforced by silence. In speaking its desires aloud, Strange Way of Life invents a new way of seeing the old West. Strange Way of Life

The film is a work of dense intertextuality. The title itself borrows from the 1974 song by Brazilian singer Caetano Veloso (later popularized by Estrella Morente), a fado-inflected ballad about inexplicable longing. Visually, Almodóvar references the painterly compositions of George Stevens’ Shane (the lone rider approaching the homestead) and the psychosexual tension of Nicholas Ray’s Johnny Guitar (a Western famously coded with queer subtext). The production design—the reds of Silva’s shirt, the deep blues of Jake’s uniform—operates in Almodóvar’s signature high-saturation palette, refusing the dusty naturalism of traditional Westerns. This artificiality reminds the viewer that we are watching a deconstruction of myth, not a myth itself. Silva asks, “What kind of life is this

Pedro Almodóvar’s 2023 short film Strange Way of Life (original Spanish title: Extraña forma de vida ) operates as a condensed yet potent intervention into the Western genre. By transposing his signature themes of repressed desire, emotional excess, and fractured identity onto the arid landscapes of the American frontier, Almodóvar queers the foundational myths of cowboy masculinity. This paper argues that the film uses the tension between its protagonists—the sheriff Jake (Ethan Hawke) and the rancher Silva (Pedro Pascal)—to deconstruct the genre’s traditional binaries of law/lawlessness, civilization/nature, and homosocial bonding/homoerotic love. Through its deliberate pacing, melodramatic dialogue, and visual citation of classic Westerns, Strange Way of Life proposes an alternative genealogy of the genre, one where emotional vulnerability and romantic fidelity supersede stoic violence. The second is emotional: after the son is

The Western has historically been a cinema of repression, where male intimacy is safely channeled into duels, partnerships, or rivalries. Almodóvar, a director long fascinated with the performance of identity, treats the Western as a closet—a dramatic space where desires can be half-articulated but never fully realized. Strange Way of Life opens with the reunion of two men who shared a passionate relationship twenty-five years prior. Jake, now a town sheriff, has summoned Silva under the pretense of a family dispute: Silva’s son is accused of murder. The film’s genius lies in how it systematically reveals that the legal investigation is a mere pretext for an emotional confrontation. The “strange way of life” of the title refers not just to the cowboy’s itinerant existence, but to the unsustainable silence that queer love has had to endure within the genre’s history.

The Queer Revisionist Western: Melodrama, Masculinity, and Memory in Pedro Almodóvar’s Strange Way of Life

This use of direct, emotionally articulate language breaks the Western’s fundamental rule: show, don’t tell. However, Almodóvar is not naive. He shows that such confession comes at a cost. Jake’s position as sheriff—the embodiment of law and order—demands that he arrest Silva’s son, even if it means destroying the possibility of reunion. The film thus stages a conflict between two temporalities: the nostalgic past (the “strange way of life” they once shared) and the brutal present of genre obligation.