|
This
week's featured review & film archive
Sarah Jaffe reviews
independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
In America (2002, Jim Sheridan)
Jim Sheridan (My Left Foot, In The Name Of the
Father) and his daughters Naomi and Kirsten co-wrote
this semi-autobiographical, poignant story of
an Irish family who move to America to seek their
fortunes. Sheridan's personal take on the subject
brings us a story that is moving, honest, and
just a little bit magical.
Paddy Considine is Johnny, a struggling actor
who brings his wife, Sarah (Samantha Morton) and
two daughters, Christy and Ariel (the utterly
amazing Sarah and Emma Bolger, real-life sisters)
to New York after the death of their son. At first,
the family appears happy, but the cracks in their
happiness soon show. Johnny struggles to find
parts in plays, and Sarah works in an ice-cream
parlor. They live in a neighborhood that it would
be generous to call a slum, but for the girls,
"America's OK!"
What makes this story different from any old
tale of a family overcoming all odds, besides
the intimacy of the material, is the thread of
magical realism running through the story. Djimon
Hounsou, who has made a career of playing the
wise black sidekick in films such as Gladiator
and The Four Feathers, finally has a real character
to play in Mateo, the downstairs neighbor. Mateo
is an artist dying of AIDS, but he embraces the
life in Christy and Ariel, and becomes the confidante
for the whole family.
There are strong performances given all around,
but the young Bolger sisters are outstanding.
Christy narrates the film, and you see the magic
in the world through her eyes. Though life is
sometimes cruel to this family, they manage to
be happy without being naive, and though America
is not paradise, the family manages to make a
home there.
Madame Sata, (2002,
Karim Ainouz)
Joao Francisco is arrested several times during
the course of this film, but the time that remains
in the memory is when he is asked by a fellow
prisoner what he's in for. He replies, "Flouting
authority."
Flouting authority is what this illiterate Jean
Genet of Brazil does best. Where Genet wrote beautiful
lyrical books out of his experiences, Joao Francisco
(Lazaro Ramos) turns them into performance art
as Madame Sata, his drag alter ego. A powerfully
built, beautiful capoeira expert who doesn't see
having sex with men or wearing makeup as interfering
with his manhood, Joao presides over the Lapa
underworld of Rio de Janeiro. He runs a tight-knit
"family," including Laurita, (Marcelia
Cartaxo) a beautiful prostitute, and his lover
Renatinho (Felipe Marques).
The film is less a well-documented biography
and more a loose portrait of a fascinating character.
It often eschews plot clarity in favor of artistically
shot scenes, but what it does best is give a feeling
for this man as he is growing into himself. Unlike
the recent Party Monster, this film isn't afraid
of Joao's sexuality or his violence. The most
interesting thing about Joao is that he lived,
not in the '80's or '90's, but in the '30's and
'40's. You can forget this while watching the
film, as its characters seem as if they would
fit in perfectly in the underbelly of any city
in the present time.
Watching this film, I couldn't help but think
of Genet's opening to The Thief's Journal, "I
give the name violence to a boldness lying idle
and enamored of danger. It can be seen in a look,
a walk, a smile, and it is in you that it creates
an eddying. It unnerves you. This violence is
a calm that disturbs you. One sometimes says,
'A guy with class!'" Joao Francisco is this
kind of dangerous, and has this kind of class.
|