25.10.22

DECISION TO LEAVE (DÉCISION DE PARTIR): Between duty and desire

Movie Review by Sergio Martínez

In this Korean film directed by Park Chan Wook, we find detective Hae-Joon (Park Hae-il), a policeman with a solid professional career who has to investigate the death of a man. An incident in which the main suspect seems to be the wife of the deceased, Seo-Rae (Tang Wei).



The policeman is very diligent in investigating the incident. His professional zeal, however, soon turns into an obsessive situation. Eventually, a closer relationship develops between the detective and the widow until the police case is closed and the woman is cleared. However, Hae Joon still needs to obsessively try to uncover the case's truth.

Some time later, when a new case, very similar to the previous one in which a man dies and Seo-Rae is again singled out as a suspect, would make the policeman and the woman meet again.

Hae Joon and the suspect, Seo Rae


Decision to Leave is a film whose genre is difficult to categorize, although the police theme is the common thread of the plot; on the other hand, we must also consider the element of mystery that the woman, between delicate and inscrutable, presents to the police officer. This element is undoubtedly at the root of the attraction she arouses.

A solid performance by both protagonists and a photography of subtle chiaroscuro contribute to creating a unique atmosphere among the viewers of this film. Decision to Leave is a film we highly recommend.

In Korean with English or French subtitles (check theatres).

Running time: 138 min.

DECISION TO LEAVE (DÉCISION DE PARTIR): Entre el deber y el deseo

Comentario de Sergio Martínez

En este film coreano dirigido por Park Chan Wook, encontramos al detective Hae-Joon, (Park Hae-il), un policía con una sólida trayectoria profesional, que tiene que investigar la muerte de un hombre, incidente en el cual la principal sospechosa parece ser la esposa del difunto, Seo-Rae (Tang Wei).

Hae Joon decide ir hasta el final en su investigación,
pero en el camino la atrayente Seo Rae
involuntariamente afectará sus planes 


El policía se dedica de manera muy acuciosa a investigar el hecho. Su celo profesional, sin embargo, pronto deviene una situación obsesiva. Eventualmente una relación más estrecha se desarrollará entre el detective y la mujer, ello hasta que el caso policial es cerrado y la mujer queda libre de cargo, aunque eso no detiene a Hae Joon en su obsesiva intención de descubrir la verdad del caso.

Un tiempo más tarde, sin embargo, un nuevo caso muy similar al anterior en que un hombre muere y Seo-Rae es nuevamente señalada como sospechosa, vuelve a encontrar al policía y la mujer.


El film oscila entre lo policial, y el halo de misterio y
atracción de la sospechosa


Decision to Leave (Décision de partir, su título en francés) es un film cuyo género es difícil de catalogar, si bien el tema policial es el hilo conductor de la trama, por otro lado, también hay que considerar el elemento de misterio que la mujer, entre delicada e inescrutable, presenta para el policía. Elemento que sin duda se halla en la raíz de la atracción que ella despierta.

Una sólida actuación de parte de ambos protagonistas y una fotografía de sutiles claroscuros contribuyen a crear una atmósfera especial entre los espectadores de este film. Decision to Leave es una película que recomendamos.

En coreano con subtítulos en inglés o en francés (chequear cines)

Duración: 138 min. 

24.10.22

Festival du nouveau cinéma: Some of the Best and Some of the Worst

Commentary by Sergio Martínez


The 51st edition of the International Festival of New Cinema was held in Montreal from October 5 to 16. Since its beginnings, this event has had an imprint of innovation, an emphasis on the less conventional productions of world cinema. Over time it has also incorporated more mainstream films, but it maintains that original vocation. Although that does not necessarily mean, as we have always said, that what is not conventional is necessarily good. This time, apart from mentioning a couple of films from the general program, we are going to focus mainly on a few Latin American and Spanish productions that were part of the program.


The best? I would go for its closing film, Les cinq diables (The Five Devils), a French film directed by Léa Mysius. An interesting film because of the intertwining of fantasy and mystery in terms of the relationships between the characters and the reason for their present situation. The past comes to haunt the protagonist Johanne and her daughter, Vicky, when the mysterious Julia returns to the village. A good film that will hopefully be released in Montreal.


On the other hand, of the worst of the Festival, I would have to mention Rimini, an Austrian film by Ulrich Seidl. The story centres on Ritchie Bravo (Michael Thomas), a singer in decline who tours hotels in Rimini. This is a holiday destination that attracts a lot of people from Austria, especially women, some of whom he lures for sex in exchange for money. There is also a whole situation of subsistence and marginality. And in this, his daughter also appears, which complicates his existence. Basically, it is a film without major aesthetic relevance and with a banal story.


As for the Latin American and Spanish presentations, it must be admitted that it was rather disappointing. In general, they were mediocre films. Without much transcendence.


Dos Estaciones: A film by Juan Pablo Gonzalez from Mexico focuses on the story of a woman owner of a medium-sized tequila factory, who is threatened by competitive circumstances, on the one hand, and by some somewhat hidden forces, which are conspiring against her. The story, however, never achieves a real focus. There are confusing things, in particular the relationship of this woman of lesbian tendency, but who does not openly manifest it, with the young assistant. It is a film that is not well made, although it has good images and at least gives some insight into the tequila-making process.


From Argentina came the film La Edad Media, directed by Alejo Moguillansky and Luciana Acuña, who are also the actors in the film but do not do well in that capacity either. Perhaps what is interesting is that it is a pandemic film, in this case, people who worked in theatre and video production activities trying to survive under the new circumstances created by confinement and isolation. The only factor that gives the film a certain original dynamic is the presence of Cleo (Cleo Moguillansky), the couple's daughter, who introduces a somewhat absurd element, but which enlivens the sluggish plot.

Scene from the Spanish movie Alcarras



Slightly more interesting were a pair of films, one from Spain, Alcarrás, directed by Carla Simón, and a Portuguese film, Alma Viva directed by Cristele Alves Meira. Alcarrás is a reflection on a situation that affects many parts of the world and seems more serious in Spain: the emptying of the population in rural regions. In both, this film and the Portuguese one, there are also elements of the myths and religiosity of rural areas. Alma Viva is an interesting film in terms of the relationship of the girl (Lua Michel) with her grandmother, the family environment and the tensions that arise there. Without being an extraordinary film, it keeps the audience's interest mainly because of the emotionality it conveys.

Lua Michel, as the charming granddaughter in Alma Viva

Festival del Nuevo Cine: Algo de lo mejor y de lo peor

Comentario de Sergio Martínez

Entre el 5 y el 16 de octubre se desarrolló en Montreal la 51ª edición del Festival Internacional del Nuevo Cine. Este evento tuvo desde sus inicios una impronta de innovación, un énfasis sobre las producciones menos convencionales de la cinematografía mundial. Con el tiempo ha ido incorporando también películas más bien del mainstream, pero mantiene esa vocación original. Aunque eso no significa necesariamente, como siempre hemos dicho, que aquello que no es convencional sea necesariamente bueno. En esta oportunidad, aparte de las menciones a un par de películas del programa general, vamos a enfocarnos principalmente sobre algunas pocas producciones latinoamericanas y españolas que fueron parte de la programación.

¿Lo mejor? Me inclinaría por su película de clausura, Les cinq diables (Los cinco diablos), una película francesa dirigida por Léa Mysius. Un film interesante por el entrelazamiento de fantasía y misterio en cuanto a las relaciones entre los personajes y el porqué de su situación presente. El pasado viene a penarle nuevamente a la protagonista Johanne y a su hija, Vicky, cuando la misteriosa Julia retorna al pueblo. Una buena película que esperamos que en algún momento se exhiba comercialmente.

Por otro lado, de lo peor del Festival, tendría que mencionar Rímini, una película austríaca de Ulrich Seidl. La historia se centra sobre Ritchie Bravo (Michael Thomas), un cantante en decadencia que hace el recorrido en hoteles de Rímini. Este un destino vacacional que atrae a mucha gente de Austria, especialmente mujeres, a algunas de las cuales atrae para sacarles dinero. Hay toda una situación ahí también de subsistencia y de marginalidad. Y en esto aparece también una hija de él, lo que le complica la existencia. Básicamente es una película sin mayor relevancia estética y con una historia banal.

En cuanto a la presentación latinoamericana y española hay que admitir que más bien fue decepcionante. En general, se trató de filmes mediocres. Sin mayor trascendencia.

Dos estaciones: Un film de Juan Pablo González de México se centra en la historia de una mujer propietaria de una mediana fábrica de tequila, quien se ve amenazada por las circunstancias de la competencia, por una parte, y también por algunas fuerzas un poco ocultas, que están conspirando contra ella. La historia, sin embargo, nunca logra un verdadero foco. Hay cosas confusas, en particular la relación de esta mujer de tendencia lesbiana, pero que no la manifiesta abiertamente, con la joven asistente. Es una película no bien lograda, aunque tiene buenas imágenes y por lo menos da algunas nociones del proceso de fabricación del tequila.

De Argentina vino la película La Edad Media, dirigida por Alejo Moguillansky y Luciana Acuña, que son también los actores de la película pero que tampoco lo hacen bien en esa capacidad. Quizás lo interesante es que se trata de una película de la pandemia, en este caso, gente que laboraba en actividades de teatro y producción de videos que trata de sobrevivir bajo las nuevas circunstancias creadas por el encierro y el aislamiento. El único factor que da una cierta dinámica original al film es la presencia de Cleo (Cleo Moguillansky), la hija de la pareja, que introduce un elemento un tanto absurdo, pero que anima la alicaída trama.


Alcarrás: el drama del vaciamiento
de las zonas rurales en España

Un poco más interesante fueron un par de películas, una proveniente de España, Alcarrás, dirigida por Carla Simón, y una portuguesa, Alma Viva dirigida por Cristele Alves Meira. Alcarrás es una reflexión sobre una situación que afecta a muchas partes del mundo y parece más grave en España: el vaciamiento de la población en las regiones rurales. Hay también una interesante relación con los mitos y religiosidad del ambiente, conexión que también encontramos en el film portugués. Alma Viva es una película interesante en términos de la relación de la chica (Lua Michel) con su abuela, el ambiente familiar y las tensiones que allí surgen. Sin ser una película extraordinaria, mantiene el interés del público principalmente por la emocionalidad que transmite.

La chica (Lua Michel) que tiene una especial relación con su abuela, 
en Alma Viva, y se revela como una notable joven actriz



25.9.22

THE GOOD AND THE BAD OF THE LATIN AMERICAN AND SPANISH PRESENCE AT THE TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL (TIFF)

Commentary by Sergio Martínez

A not very large Latin American presence, but with some interesting productions was what we had the opportunity to see at the recent Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) held between September 8 and 18.

Next, the review and critical commentary of those we saw.

Domingo and the Mist (Dir. Ariel Escalante Meza, Costa Rica-Qatar)

Domingo and the Mist

A combination of the mystical and the real estate speculation in view of a highway under construction puts Domingo (Carlos Ureña) in the situation of defending his land. The director manages to mesh Domingo's story very well, his relationship with his daughter Sylvia (Sylvia Sossa) and the symbolic presence of his deceased wife through the tropical mist. These elements create a world between magic and reality in which the inhabitants of the small town that will be affected by the expansion of the highway live. All this without forgetting that the powerful interests at stake are ready to resort to violent methods to achieve their goal. The cinematography of this film (by Nicolás Wong Díaz) is particularly remarkable.

La jauría (Dir. Andrés Ramírez Pulido, Colombia)

La jauría
A peculiar method of rehabilitating young people in the middle of the jungle produces unexpected results. Two young criminals, Eliu (Jhojan Stiven Jiménez) and El Mono (Maicol Andrés Jiménez), are also sent to this rehabilitation centre when they are captured. Still, things will not develop as the chiefs of the facility intended. The film is a remarkable depiction of the world of violence in which many young people from marginalized sectors are involved.

Presences (Dir. Luis Mandoki, Mexico)

This film was not part of the program but was one of the private screenings out of the schedule. We received an invitation and went to see it. We were curious about a "Mexican horror film". It was indeed a film with horror elements but also an incursion into the mystery of the human mind. A celebrated actor and his partner move into an old semi-abandoned house belonging to the actor's family to sell it. But what seems to be an inexplicable phenomenon, plus the hostility of the town's neighbours, will turn the visitors' stay into a nightmare, in which the elements of terror will only become apparent towards the end of the film.

Love and Mathematics (Dir. Claudia Sainte-Luce, Mexico)


A comedy with elements of romance, in which the protagonists must face the dilemma of following or breaking the rules. Billy (Roberto Quijano) is a former member of a now-defunct rock band; his life is quiet and monotonous, taking care of the baby he has with his wife, the breadwinner. 

Love and Mathematics

The arrival of a new married couple in the neighbourhood will produce a refreshing change, especially when the mild-mannered neighbour Monica (Diana Bovio) reveals herself to be a former fan of the defunct band, especially Billy. Undoubtedly, this is a story with a lot of tenderness and sensitivity.




Charcoal (Dir. Carolina Markovicz, Brazil-Argentina)

A not very well-structured story in which a nurse in a border town in Brazil asks a family to hide an Argentine drug trafficker. The film has an interesting setting but fails to find the focus of the plot; on the one hand, there is the presence of the grandfather, bedridden and unable to communicate; on the other, the sudden change of nurse that social services send to take care of the older man, in the middle, the woman's child. The new nurse proposes a deal that will change the family's daily life and will mainly affect the housewife's son.

A CHILEAN FRENCH DOCUMENTARY

My Imaginary Country (Patricio Guzmán, France-Chile)

Chilean director Patricio Guzman, based in France, covers in this film the period between the social upheaval that occurred in Chile in 2019 until its culmination in the formation of a constitutional convention charged with drafting a new constitution for the country and the election of a leftist president at the end of 2021. Emotionally powerful as all of this director's films, this documentary, with its hopeful message, contrasts with the reality of the defeat of the constitutional project, obviously not covered by the film. However, it could undoubtedly be an excellent topic for future foray by Guzman into his country's recent history.

My Imaginary Country


THE SPANISH FILMS

El agua (Dir. Elena López Riera, Spain)

This young Spanish filmmaker's film was very interesting to watch because of the way it intertwines myth and legend around water in a small Spanish town—especially the legend of how the water possessed some young girls in the village.

The story focuses on the adolescent experiences of the protagonist, Ana (Luna Pamies), both in her relationship with her mother (Bárbara Lemmie) and her grandmother (Nieve de Medina). All of this is framed by the presence of water as a factor of life and destruction and threat.

El agua


Stories Not to be Told (Dir. Cesc Gay, Spain)

Stories Not to be Told


This entertaining film revives the episodic format, with four stories in which, three of them centre on the topic of love, sex and somehow the couple's commitment and fidelity. In the fourth, the focus is more on the desire to maintain a certain image on the part of a group of actresses in decline. Approached in a very humorous way by the director, the characters try to deal with their thinly disguised vulnerabilities and dissatisfactions—a remarkable comedy with an irreverent look at human relationships in these times.


CANADIAN FILMS DIRECTED BY LATINAS

Two films, with very different results, were directed by directors of Latin American origin: Katherine Jerkovic, of Uruguayan origin, and Lina Rodriguez, born in Colombia and also based in this country.

Coyote (Dir. Katherine Jerkovic, Canada)

Like many Latinos in Montreal, Camilo (Jorge Martínez Colorado) works for a company that cleans office buildings. In a better time, he had owned his restaurant, El Coyote, but circumstances that will be revealed later led to the end of the business. However, the possibilities of returning to his profession as a chef seem to be on Camilo's horizon again. Still, he will have to move out of the city to do so. The unexpected visit of his daughter Tania (Eva Avila), whom he has not seen for years, will cause changes in Camilo's life, especially when she asks him to take care of her son while she goes to a drug rehabilitation centre. The director gives us an intimate and well-articulated vision of the father-daughter-grandson relationship. However, in the end, there may be a bitter aftertaste. This is because it highlights that sometimes in life, one sacrifices important personal things to benefit others, who cannot be ignored. It is a challenging dilemma to solve. A film worth seeing once it is released in Montreal.

Coyote

So Much Tenderness (Dir. Lina Rodriguez)

Full of platitudes, the wife of a lawyer murdered in Colombia arrives in Canada as a refugee with her daughter. We did not give a very positive critical judgment to this film which, although Canadian, has a theme that touches the Latino immigrant community. A Colombian lawyer, Aurora (Noëlle Schönwald), specializing in environmental issues, arrives in Canada after her husband was murdered in strange circumstances in her country. Once settled here and now working as a Spanish teacher, she also has to deal with the unclear demands of her teenage daughter Lucia (Natalia Aranguren). To complicate matters further, an individual allegedly linked to her husband's murder unexpectedly turns up working in a Toronto cafe. The latter seems highly implausible: why, of all places, would this guy show up not only in Toronto but in a neighbourhood frequented by the now refugee? Or is it all a figment of her imagination? The problem is that the plot is unclear as to its probable conclusions.

A LATINO-U.S. FILM

Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe (Dir. Aitch Alberto, USA).

Aristoteles and Dante Discover
the Secrets of the Universe

Set in 1987 in the border town of El Paso, this film nicely chronicles the dynamic and sometimes complex relationship between two adolescents. Ari, from a family of Mexican origin, meets Dante at a public swimming pool in the city. While the Mexican-born boy's family lives a more traditional lifestyle, Dante's family is less conventional. Eventually, the nature of the relationship will confront both young men with difficult decisions and definitions regarding their own identities.

LO BUENO Y LO MALO DE LA PRESENCIA LATINA Y ESPAÑOLA EN EL FESTIVAL INTERNACIONAL DE CINE DE TORONTO

Comentario de Sergio Martínez

Una presencia latinoamericana no muy grande, pero con algunas producciones interesantes fue lo que tuvimos oportunidad de ver en el reciente Festival Internacional de Cine de Toronto (TIFF) celebrado entre el 8 y el 18 de septiembre.

Esta es la reseña y comentario crítico de aquellas que vimos.

Domingo y la niebla (Dir. Ariel Escalante Meza, Costa Rica-Catar)

Domingo y la niebla

Una combinación de lo místico y lo muy terrenal de la especulación inmobiliaria en vistas de una carretera en construcción, pone a Domingo (Carlos Ureña) en la situación de defender su tierra. El director logra engranar muy bien la historia de Domingo, la relación con su hija Sylvia (Sylvia Sossa) y la presencia simbólica, a través de la niebla tropical, de su fallecida esposa. Estos elementos hacen un mundo entre mágico y real en el que se desenvuelven los habitantes de la pequeña localidad que será afectada por la expansión carretera. Todo eso sin olvidar que los poderosos intereses en juego están prontos a recurrir a métodos violentos para conseguir su objetivo. La fotografía de este film (a cargo de Nicolás Wong Díaz) es particularmente remarcable.

La jauría

La jauría (Dir. Andrés Ramírez Pulido, Colombia)

Un peculiar método de rehabilitación de jóvenes en medio de la selva produce imprevistos resultados. Dos jóvenes delincuentes, Eliu (Jhojan Stiven Jiménez) y El Mono (Maicol Andrés Jiménez) cuando son capturados son enviados también a ese centro de rehabilitación, pero las cosas no se desarrollarán como sus directivos se lo proponían. El film hace una notable descripción del mundo de violencia en que se ven envueltos muchos jóvenes de sectores marginales.

Presencias (Dir. Luis Mandoki, México)

Este film no hacía parte de la programación, sino que fue una de las exhibiciones privadas, fuera de programa. Recibimos una invitación y fuimos a verlo. Teníamos curiosidad por un “film mexicano de terror”. En verdad una película con elementos de terror, pero también de incursión en el misterio de la mente humana. Un celebrado actor y su pareja se trasladan a una antigua casa semiabandonada, perteneciente a la familia del actor, con el objeto de proceder a su venta. Pero lo que parecen inexplicables fenómenos, más la hostilidad de los vecinos del pueblo, tornarán la estancia de los visitantes en una pesadilla, en que los elementos del terror sólo se aclararán hacia el final del film.

Amor y matemáticas (Dir. Claudia Sainte-Luce, México)

Amor y matemáticas

Una comedia con elementos de romance, en la que los protagonistas deben enfrentar la disyuntiva de seguir o saltarse las reglas. Billy (Roberto Quijano) es un ex integrante de una banda hoy desaparecida, su vida transcurre tranquila y monótona, ocupándose del bebé que tiene con su esposa, quien es la que mantiene el hogar. La llegada al vecindario de un nuevo matrimonio producirá un cambio vital, especialmente cuando la apacible vecina Mónica (Diana Bovio), se revela como una antigua fan de la fenecida banda y en especial de Billy. Sin duda se trata de una historia con mucha ternura y sensibilidad.

Carbón (Dir. Carolina Markovicz, Brasil-Argentina)

Una historia no muy bien enlazada en la que una enfermera en un pueblo fronterizo de Brasil encarga a una familia esconder a narcotraficante argentino. El film tiene una interesante ambientación, pero falla en centrar el foco de la trama, por un lado, está la presencia del abuelo postrado en cama y sin poder comunicarse, por otro, el súbito cambio de enfermera que los servicios sociales envían para ocuparse del anciano, en el medio, el niño de la mujer. La nueva enfermera le propone un trato que cambiará la vida cotidiana de la familia y afectará especialmente al hijo de la dueña de casa.

UN DOCUMENTAL CHILENO-FRANCÉS

Mi país imaginario (Patricio Guzmán, Francia-Chile)

El director chileno Patricio Guzmán, radicado en Francia, cubre en este film el período entre el estallido social ocurrido en Chile en 2019 hasta su culminación en la formación de una convención constitucional encargada de redactar una nueva constitución para el país, y la elección de un presidente izquierdista a fines de 2021. Emocionalmente impactante como todos los filmes de este director, este documental con su mensaje esperanzador contrasta con la realidad de la derrota del proyecto constitucional, obviamente no cubierta por la película, aunque por cierto podría ser un muy buen tópico para una futura incursión de Guzmán en la historia reciente de su país.

Mi país imaginario


LOS FILMES ESPAÑOLES

El agua (Dir. Elena López Riera, España)

El film de esta joven realizadora española fue muy interesante de ver por la manera como se entrelaza el mito y la leyenda en torno al agua en una pequeña localidad española. En especial la leyenda de cómo el agua poseía a ciertas jóvenes del pueblo.

Concurren en la historia las experiencias adolescentes de la protagonista, Ana (Luna Pamies), tanto en la relación con su madre (Bárbara Lemmie) como con su abuela (Nieve de Medina). Todo ello enmarcado por la presencia del agua como factor de vida, pero también de destrucción y amenaza.

El agua


Historias para no contar (Dir. Cesc Gay, España)

Historias para no contar


Esta entretenida película revive el formato de episodios, con cuatro historias en las que el tema central en tres de ellas, son el amor, el sexo y de algún modo el compromiso de pareja y la fidelidad. En la cuarta el foco se centra más sobre el afán de mantener cierta imagen de parte de un grupo de actrices en decadencia. Abordados de un modo muy humorístico, los personajes tratan, por sobre todo, de lidiar con sus vulnerabilidades e insatisfacciones apenas disfrazadas. Una notable comedia con una irreverente mirada a las relaciones humanas en estos tiempos.

FILMES CANADIENSES DIRIGIDOS POR LATINAS

Dos películas, con resultados muy diferentes, fueron dirigidas por realizadoras de origen latinoamericano: Katherine Jerkovic, de origen uruguayo, y Lina Rodríguez, nacida en Colombia y radicada también en este país.

Coyote


Coyote (Dir. Katherine Jerkovic, Canadá)

Camilo (Jorge Martínez Colorado), como muchos latinos en Montreal, trabaja para una compañía que hace aseo en edificios de oficinas. En un mejor tiempo había tenido su propio restaurante, El Coyote, pero circunstancias que nos revelará más adelante, llevaron al término del negocio. Sin embargo, las posibilidades de retornar a su profesión de chef parecen nuevamente en el horizonte de Camilo, sólo que para ello tendrá que mudarse fuera de la ciudad. La inesperada visita de su hija Tania (Eva Ávila), a quien no veía desde hacía años, va a causar cambios en la vida de Camilo, especialmente cuando ella le pide que se haga cargo de su hijo, mientras ella se interna en un centro de rehabilitación de drogas. La directora nos entrega una visión intimista y muy bien articulada de la relación padre-hija-nieto, aunque al final puede quedar un dejo amargo. Esto porque pone de relieve que a veces en la vida uno sacrifica cosas muy importantes en lo personal, en aras de beneficiar a otros, que tampoco se pueden ignorar. Es un dilema muy difícil de resolver. Un film que vale la pena ver una vez que se estrene en Montreal.

So Much Tenderness (Tanta ternura, Dir. Lina Rodríguez)

Pleno de lugares comunes, la mujer de un abogado asesinado en Colombia y que llega a Canadá como refugiada con su hija. No nos mereció un juicio crítico muy positivo este film que, si bien es canadiense, tiene una temática que toca a la comunidad latina inmigrante. Una abogada colombiana, Aurora (Noëlle Schönwald) especializada en temas ambientales llega a Canadá después de que su marido fuera asesinado en extrañas circunstancias en su país. Una vez instalada aquí, y luego de que al cabo de tres años trabaja como profesora de español, ella tiene que lidiar también con las demandas—no muy claras— de su hija adolescente Lucía (Natalia Aranguren). Para complicar más las cosas, un individuo que estaría vinculado al asesinato de su marido aparece inesperadamente trabajando en un café de Toronto. Esto último parece altamente implausible ¿por qué, de todos los lugares, ese sujeto habría de aparecer precisamente no sólo en Toronto, sino en un vecindario frecuentado por la ahora refugiada? ¿O es que todo eso es producto de su imaginación? El problema es que la trama no es clara respecto de sus probables conclusiones.

UN FILM LATINO-ESTADOUNIDENSE

Aristóteles y Dante descubren los secretos del universo (Dir.Aitch Alberto, EE. UU.).


Ambientada en 1987 en la localidad fronteriza de El Paso, este film nos relata muy bien la dinámica y a veces compleja relación entre dos muchachos. Ari, de una familia de origen mexicano, conoce a Dante en una piscina
pública de la ciudad. Mientras la familia del joven de origen mexicano se maneja con esquemas de vida más tradicionales, la familia de Dante es menos convencional. Eventualmente, el carácter de la relación enfrentará a ambos jóvenes ante difíciles decisiones y definiciones respecto de sus propias identidades.

22.9.22

OUR LOOK AT THE TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

Commentary by Sergio Martínez

The Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) took place between September 8 and 18. For those of us who had the opportunity to enjoy it, it was a delightful reunion with theatrical screenings after two years of the pandemic. Once again, it is gratifying that Canada — in this case, its largest metropolis — hosts this important cultural event. This year's selection has been very satisfactory, at least in terms of the films that, as a critic, I had the opportunity to see.

SOME OF THE BEST

By the way, one's view of the festival is always limited because of the more than two hundred films presented. One can only see a limited number.

Of the total number of films seen, I have selected nine as the best of TIFF.

LIVING (Oliver Hermanus, UK): The humanization of the bureaucrat.

This film is an adaptation of Akira Kurosawa's Japanese classic Ikiru (1952), with Bill Nighy as Mr. Williams, an ageing bureaucrat ensconced in a London city administration office. "Maintaining the status quo is more important than progress in paperwork" is the unwritten motto of the civil servants.

An unforeseen change in his life as a result of a medical examination will give the old bureaucrat a sense of humanity. A friendship with a former employee of his office, plus the efforts of a group of neighbours who want the city to build a playground on an abandoned site, will help Mr. Williams see life from a different perspective.

A well-presented story, with excellent acting and a realistic 1950s town setting, makes Living one of the best films of the 2022 edition of TIFF.


THE ORIGIN OF EVIL
(Sebastian Marnier, France-Canada): There are no "good guys" here.

Between drama and a bit of an ironic look at human relationships is how this film full of unexpected twists and turns could be characterized. A young woman working in a fish packing plant faces a difficult economic situation. On the emotional level, she also has difficulties because her girlfriend is in jail. The solution to her problems would come when she manages to reunite with her father, who had abandoned her and her mother.

The Origin of Evil

However, her reinsertion into her father's life – who is now a man of great wealth – will not be easy: neither Serge's current wife, his father, nor his other daughter, nor even the maid, will look favourably on someone they perceive as an intruder who comes looking for money. However, things are somewhat more complex when the wife and the other daughter have their own scheme to get their hands on the father's fortune. But-and therein lies much of the film's charm- not all the characters are what they seem to be. Except that none is the "good guy or gal" in the movie.

THE FABELMANS (Steven Spielberg, USA): From fantasy to unusual autobiography.

Well known as a director of films that take us to meet aliens or explore fantastic places, this time, Steven Spielberg has given us a much more personal and intimate vision of his own life. The Fabelmans are a Jewish family living in the 1950s, with an engineer father (Paul Dano) dedicated to the then new but promising field of computers and a mother (Michelle Williams) who has artistic aspirations, which in any case fail to materialize. 

The Fabelmans
As a child, Sammy (Gabriel LaBelle) had his first experience of seeing a movie, something that would mark his life forever. Making movies would be his dream, but he had to reach a goal by overcoming some obstacles: his parents' divorce and, while living in California, having to deal with aggressive anti-Semitism. The film drags on for more than two hours. Still, its dynamic narrative keeps the audience's attention until the last ironic scene. 

DALILAND (Mary Harron, UK-USA): Dali's surreal moments.

Ben Kingsley and Barbara Sukowa deliver an unforgettable performance in this film covering Salvador Dalí's years in the United States. The narrative is told primarily through the eyes of young James (Christopher Briney), who becomes part of Dali's entourage after his work in an art gallery. Dalí's creative genius is also combined with a life of excess that has repercussions on his financial status and some practices that today would be highly reproached.

Daliland


Above all, the film delivers a stark vision of the artistic milieu in which Dalí moved and those who revolved around him to profit from his fame.


EMPIRE OF LIGHT (Sam Mendes, UK-USA): Beauty, tenderness, and cinema.

Probably since that beautiful film Cinema Paradiso, we haven't had the chance to see this combination of great tenderness and love, set around cinema and, more specifically, in the Empire, a movie theatre in a seaside town in Great Britain. Set in the 80s, the Empire is one of those glamorous movie palaces, but which, already in those years, begins to suffer the decline that would end up replacing them, for the multiplexes we know today. But the Empire will still have a time of glory and largely due to the dedication of its own employees: Hilary (Olivia Colman), the projectionist (Toby Jones) and the newcomer Stephen (Michael Ward), a black man who, in those years will have to face the racist outbursts present in British society. The theatre manager (Colin Firth) obtains sexual favours from Hilary. Still, she will have to deal with the consequences when she decides to end this situation.

Above all, however, what remains is the atmosphere of the movie palace, the Empire, the centre of these human adventures and misadventures. In my opinion the best film of the entire Festival.

Empire of Light



THE UMBRELLA MEN (John Barker, South Africa): A band in more than one sense.

A comedy, but also with a particular social commentary, is what we find in this film. The "Umbrella Men" are a musical band, but their other role will be to serve as the distraction in a clever ploy to rob a bank right on Carnival Day in Cape Town. 

The Umbrella Men

There is also the settling of scores with a neighbourhood mobster looking to take over a historic jazz venue. And, of course, there's no lack of romance either.





ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT (Edward Berger, Germany): The war doesn't seem to be over.

A remake of Lewis Milestone's famous 1930 film, based on Erich Maria Remarque's novel of the same name, itself considered the most powerful account of trench warfare during the 1914-1918 world conflict. The film depicts the transition of the young men who enthusiastically enlist to fight for the fatherland to soon after beginning to live the rigours of one of the cruellest conflicts of the 20th century. Excellent acting and a narrative that does not elude the war's most brutal moments and images. One of the best films presented at TIFF.

All Quiet on the Western Front


THE WONDER (Sebastian Lelio, UK-Ireland): Faith and its use.

Chilean director Sebastian Lelio, whom we have already seen dabble successfully in international productions; this time tackles the theme of faith and its use in a small Irish village in the 19th century. The film is an adaptation of Emma Donoghue's novel, Lib Wright (Florence Pugh), a nurse who had been part of Florence Nightingale's corps of nurses in the Crimean War, is hired by the municipal council of a small village in Ireland to observe, together with a nun, the strange phenomenon of Anna O'Donnell (Kila Lord Cassidy), an 11-year-old girl who has not eaten for four months. Her family and the locals make the girl a miracle case, but the nurse will try to get to the bottom of the situation. Certainly, faith, but also the uses to which it can be put, is a factor that Lib will have to deal with, facing more than a bit of hostility.

The Wonder


STORIES NOT TO BE TOLD (HISTORIAS PARA NO CONTAR, Cesc Gay, Spain): The complicated search for love and sex.

This entertaining film revives the episodic format, with four stories in which the central theme in three of them are love, sex and somehow the couple's commitment and fidelity. In the fourth one, the focus is more on the desire to maintain a certain image on the part of a group of actresses in decline. Treated in a very humorous way by the director, the characters try to deal with their barely disguised vulnerabilities and dissatisfactions—a remarkable comedy with an irreverent look at human relationships in these times.

IT WAS WORTH WATCHING THEM

DOMINGO AND THE MIST (Domingo y la niebla, Ariel Escalante Meza, Costa Rica-Catar).

A combination of the mystical and earthy consequences of road expansions (complete review in the article on Latin American presence at TIFF).

ARISTÓTELES AND DANTE DISCOVER THE SECRETS OF THE UNIVERSE (Aitch Alberto, USA)

Two boys of Mexican origin but living in the United States face the experience of finding meaning in their own relationship (complete review in the article on Latin American presence at TIFF).

EL AGUA (Elena López Riera, Spain): The myth and its meanings.

This young Spanish filmmaker's film was very interesting to watch because of the way it intertwines myth and legend around water in a small Spanish town: especially the legend of how water possessed certain young women in the town.

El agua

The story is told through the adolescent experiences of the protagonist, Ana (Luna Pamies), both in her relationship with her mother (Bárbara Lemmie) and her grandmother (Nieve de Medina). All of this is framed by the presence of water as a factor of life and destruction and threat.


LA JAURÍA (Andrés Ramírez Pulido, Colombia)

A peculiar method of rehabilitating young people in the middle of the jungle produces unexpected results (complete review in the article on Latin American presence at TIFF).

COYOTE (Katherine Jerkovic, Canada): Someone must make a sacrifice.

Like many Latinos in Montreal, Camilo (Jorge Martinez Colorado) works for a company that cleans office buildings. In a better time, he had owned a restaurant, El Coyote, but circumstances that he will reveal later led to the end of the business. However, the possibilities of returning to his profession as a chef seem to be on Camilo's horizon again. Still, he will have to move out of the city to do so. 

Coyote

The unexpected visit of his daughter Tania (Eva Avila), whom he has not seen for years, will cause changes in Camilo's life, especially when she asks him to take care of her son while she goes to a drug rehabilitation centre. The director gives us an intimate and well-articulated vision of the father-daughter-grandson relationship. However, in the end, there may be a bitter aftertaste. A film worth seeing.

ALLELUJAH* (Richard Eyre, United Kingdom): Health in trouble.

Not only do we see how health services are deteriorating in Canada, but Great Britain, the cradle of public health services in the West, also suffers this situation with the closure of hospital wards. The threat of closure threatens the hospital in this film, Bethlehem, specializing in geriatric care. The dedication of its doctor and the work of many volunteers will try to save the venerable Beth. At the same time, other dramas unfold within its walls.

* This is the spelling used by the film.

LOVE AND MATHEMATICS (Claudia Sainte-Luce, Mexico)

A comedy with elements of romance, in which the protagonists must face the dilemma of following or breaking the rules (complete review in the article on Latin American presence at TIFF).

PRESENCIAS (Luis Mandoki, Mexico)

This film was not part of the program but was one of the private screenings out of the schedule. We received an invitation and went to see it. We were curious about a "Mexican horror film". It was indeed a film with horror elements but also an incursion into the mystery of the human mind. (Complete review in the article on Latin American presence at TIFF).

THE GREATEST BEER RUN EVER (Peter Farrelly, USA): From patriotism to harsh reality.

Set in the year 1967, the Vietnam War is at its height, and in New York, during a night in the neighbourhood bar, John "Chickie" Donohue (Zac Efron) sets himself a very crazy task but is inspired by a sincere patriotic feeling: to go to Vietnam, to visit his friends and neighbours who are deployed there, to bring them encouragement and, in addition, a suitcase full of American beer. Donohue will have to go through many ups and downs to accomplish his mission, but in the process, he will learn a lot about the conflict. Foremost, the war was not the way the government portrayed it. His patriotism will be put to the test. (This film is based on a true story).

OUTSTANDING DOCUMENTARIES

Theater of Thought


THEATER OF THOUGHT (Werner Herzog, Germany-USA): The brain of the future.

Herzog presents in this documentary a fascinating foray into the latest research on what happens in the brain when we are conscious. Incidentally, it also examines the prospects of future artificial intelligence and how it would be similar to or different from human intelligence.

WHILE WE WATCHED (Vijay Shukla, United Kingdom): The manipulation of information.

This is a very topical film set in India. Still, it could be relevant in practically any other country where the media are subject to pressures, whether from governments or other powerful interests. 


The documentary focuses on a veteran Indian journalist, Ravish Kumar, who, despite pressures, hardships and even threats to his life, tries to maintain the integrity of the journalistic profession.



THE GRAB (Gabriella Cowperthwaite, USA): Water, the oil of the future.

Another documentary of current interest, based on a thorough journalistic investigation, focused on how large corporations have been acquiring land for some time, especially in African countries, in order to supply the food needs of developed countries. Water and land with access to the vital liquid are transformed into desirable assets for these large companies. In many cases, such as the one illustrated in the film, this has meant the displacement of local populations from their ancestral lands. A film that shows a burning issue with images and interviews conveys the message effectively and directly.

UN PAIS IMAGINARIO (An Imaginary Country, Patricio Guzmán, France-Chile): And so, it goes on.

France-based Chilean director Patricio Guzman covers in this film the period between the social outbreak that occurred in Chile in 2019 to its culmination in the formation of a constitutional convention charged with drafting a new constitution for the country and the election of a leftist president in late 2021. Emotionally powerful as all this director's films, this documentary, with its hopeful message, contrasts with the reality of the defeat of the constitutional project, obviously not covered by the film. However, it could certainly be a very good topic for a future foray by Guzman into his country's recent history.

An Imaginary Country


THOSE THAT COULD HAVE BEEN BETTER

NIGHTALK (Donald Shebib, Canada): A somewhat weak story.

A potentially interesting story: beautiful Toronto detective Brenda Roberto (Ashley Bryant), who comes from a family of cops, is confronted with a murder case in which she suspects Tom (Al Makadam), an enigmatic character on a highly erotic dating website, may be involved. Brenda contacts the suspect, but at stake is not only her professional interest but also the fulfilment of her own sexual fantasies. The story, however, lacks plausibility and has some loose ends.

CHARCOAL (Carolina Markovicz, Brazil-Argentina)

A loosely linked story in which a nurse in a Brazilian border town instructs a family to harbour an Argentine drug trafficker (complete review in the article on Latin American presence at TIFF).

CORSAGE (Marie Kreutzer, Austria): An inefficient narrative.

Set in 1877, Empress Elisabeth of Austria (Vicky Krieps) faces the gradual deterioration of her relationship with her husband, Emperor Franz Joseph (Florian Teitchmeister). The film's title alludes to the corset worn by the sovereign, but without further development on that theme. A sometimes-confusing narrative and a certain liberality with history (the presence of electric lamps and a tractor, for example, long before such implements were invented) detract from the verisimilitude of the narrative.

THE WORST OF THE FESTIVAL

THE HOTEL (Wang Xiaoshuai, Hong Kong): A dull product of boredom.

The Hotel

TIFF presented Wang Xiaoshuai as a Chinese auteur with an important career to his credit. This film, however, made under exceptional circumstances in which the filmmaker, his family and other friends were confined to a hotel in Thailand at the onset of the pandemic, fails to rise above the category of a creation of boredom caused by confinement, which in the end turns out to be profoundly boring as well.

So Much Tenderness


SO MUCH TENDERNESS
(Lina Rodriguez, Canada): Platitudes.

Full of platitudes, the wife of a lawyer murdered in Colombia arrives in Canada as a refugee with her daughter, this is a flawed film by Colombian-Canadian director Lina Rodriguez.
(More complete review in the article on Latin American presence at TIFF).