The first is Spanish director Pedro Almodovar's "Broken Embraces," her fourth collaboration with the filmmaker who helped make her a star, and the second is musical "Nine" from director Rob Marshall, which challenged her voice and her previously little-known dancing skills.
Both films hope to win over Oscar voters during Hollywood's awards season, and after her own Academy Award-winning turn in Woody Allen comedy "Vicky Cristina Barcelona" last year, Penelope Cruz is again earning some early Oscar buzz -- doubled.
"I feel like I have learned a lot. The movies could not be more different," Penelope Cruz told reporters recently.
"To be able to sing for the first time professionally and dance (in 'Nine'), it was a scary experience. 'Broken Embraces' is like three women in one. I feel like the luckiest girl in the world."
"Broken Embraces" opens on Friday after turns at the Cannes and Toronto film festivals where it earned good marks from critics. Review website rottentomatoes.com gives it an 82 percent positive rating.
Penelope Cruz calls both movies homages to cinema -- "Nine" to the work of the Italian director Federico Fellini, and "Broken Embraces" to the tradition of film noir.
After playing a prostitute, a nun who falls in love with a transvestite, and a woman whose husband is buried in the fridge in previous Almodovar movies, Cruz tackles the part of a poor assistant to a powerful tycoon in "Broken Embraces."
But as lowly as her character starts out, she goes on to become the rich man's partner and then plays a figure counter to herself in a movie within the movie. While it sounds somewhat complicated, it is vintage Almodovar.
"Every time Pedro has given me a script, I have really been blown away. The characters (I have played) couldn't be more different from each other, and from who I am," she said.
MULTI-TALENTED, PERSONALLY TIGHT-LIPPED
In "Nine," from Oscar-winning "Chicago" director Marshall, Cruz shows audiences another new facet of her many talents.
The Fellini-inspired movie, in which she teams with Nicole Kidman, Judi Dench, Daniel Day Lewis, Sophia Loren and Marion Cotillard, does not open in the United States until December 25, but already a brief clip of Cruz in a bustier performing a sultry song and dance is making waves among movie fans.
Penelope Cruz, 35, had early ambitions to be a dancer, taking ballet classes in her native Madrid from 5 to 15-years-old, but dramatic acting took its course and stardom ensued.
So, she went back to training five hours-a-day for her role as the mistress of a middle-aged moviemaker in "Nine," after being shown the routine she would be asked to perform.