Wednesday, May 30, 2012
The Conspirator
Robert Redford directed this 2011 historical drama about Mary Surratt's involvement in the conspiracy to assassinate Abraham Lincoln. If nothing else can be said about the film, its cast is certainly impressive: James McAvoy, Tom Wilkinson, Robin Wright, Justin Long, Evan Rachel Wood, Kevin Kline and many others. My two favorites were both big players in the HBO series The Wire - Roland Pryzbylewski and Frank Sobotka.
The Conspirator was good enough to watch at home, but would have been even better to show to a class full of high school students, as it plays just like a documentary.
Saturday, May 12, 2012
A Better Life
A Better Life stars Demian Bichir as Carlos, a
hard-working Mexican single father who is finding it increasingly difficult to
raise his 14 year old son Luis in low-rent Los Angeles. He makes what little money they do have by
doing landscaping jobs around the city.
Each day, he gets in his boss’ pickup truck and goes to an expensive
home and trims hedges, climbs palm trees and cuts grass. When his boss tries to convince him to buy
the pickup truck off of him so he could begin working for himself, Carlos tells
him that he doesn’t have any money to purchase the vehicle and, even if he did,
he would lose everything if he were to get pulled over by the police since he
doesn’t have a driver’s license or proper paperwork to be in the United
States.
Luis is at that point in a
teenager’s life where he is battling with difficult decisions on a daily basis:
Do I join a gang? Do I drop out of school? Do I chase the dream of making easy
money on the streets rather than earning an education and a legitimate
career? Despite some brutally terrible
acting by the young people who play his friends, Jose Julian does a fantastic
job in the role as Luis. As a teacher, I
see first-hand what teenagers can be like at their worst – and Luis is, for
most of the film, pretty easy to dislike.
He is ungrateful, apathetic and disrespectful. Carlos tries to instill in him some work
ethic and respect, but it falls on deaf ears.
Luis seems destined to be another drop-out in the long line of young
people who feel that school is an unnecessary waste of their time.
I thought about how difficult it
must be to get quality acting from teenagers for a smaller film like this one
and am willing to give a pass to the overall quality of the movie since Julian
does such fine work. If you go with more
famous faces, then you lose something in the authenticity of the story and if
you go with unknown people who may not even be actors, then you run the risk of
getting poor performances, which was the case here. It can’t be easy casting a movie like this.
Carlos ends up getting a loan from
his sister to buy the truck from his boss.
He takes a few extra dollars and buys something nice for Luis, which
goes unappreciated. Carlos talks to Luis
about how having a truck will change everything for them – how it will allow
them to develop their landscaping business into something truly great, thus
providing them with the opportunity to move out of their neighborhood and get
Luis into a really good school. This
seems to sink in to Luis, but only for a moment. A pickup truck (and the necessary tools to
run a landscaping business) is the key to a Mexican immigrant’s true
independence in this unforgiving country.
Carlos now is in possession of it all – but not for long.
After Carlos loses the truck, the
film’s plot turns into a bit of a revenge/mystery/thriller, which I found
riveting – especially since the stakes are so dramatically high. We finally get to see if Luis is going to
grow up enough to try and rebuild his relationship with his father and it’s at
this point where the movie really hits home.
Many great scenes between father and son fill out the final 30 minutes. One particularly poignant exchange between
Carlos and Luis takes place, symbolically, in a doorway.
Demian Bichir earned a well-deserved Oscar nomination for his leading role and I would have loved to see him win it. Oldman's performance was too muted, Pitt's was unspectacular, and Dujardin's was a joke. George Clooney was really good in The Descendants, but still not as good as Bichir was here.
Demian Bichir earned a well-deserved Oscar nomination for his leading role and I would have loved to see him win it. Oldman's performance was too muted, Pitt's was unspectacular, and Dujardin's was a joke. George Clooney was really good in The Descendants, but still not as good as Bichir was here.
A
Better Life is an amazing film that will probably make you ruminate on how
the American government manages immigration policy. For me, it offered a very personal look into
how the pursuit of the American dream can oftentimes be a difficult and tragic journey. But mostly, I loved this film because it
tells a story of the undying devotion a father has for his troubled son.
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