– Conchita owns the underwear factory; Silvia works there. – Raul becomes a tool of class revenge. – Key line: “Money fucks everything” (spoken by Raul).

| Symbol | Meaning in Film | Example Scene | |--------|----------------|----------------| | Ham leg | Phallic symbol of male power | Raul (Javier Bardem) carrying a ham leg like a club | | Ham slicing | Eroticized labor & class hierarchy | Silvia (Penélope Cruz) working in a ham factory | | Eating ham | Consumer desire & animal instinct | The banquet scene where characters devour meat messily |

“Jamon Jamon is not about ham. It’s about hunger.” – Bigas Luna

– Violence escalates. A final confrontation in a dusty arena recalls a bullfight—but with a ham leg as a weapon. – Ending: silent, unresolved, mimicking a classical myth.

The eroticism is never just about sex—it’s a currency of power. 5. Lens 3 – Cinematic Style: What to Watch For Luna uses specific visual techniques to tell the story without dialogue:

– José Luis hires Raul to seduce his own mother (Conchita) to distract her from his relationship with Silvia. – Visual style: bright, playful, with absurdist humor.

| Element | What to note | |---------|---------------| | Ham = | Power + desire + death | | Raul = | The animal male (bull/man) | | Silvia = | The watching woman (survivor) | | Underwear = | Class uniform / erotic cage | | Final shot = | Silence after consumption |