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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
bleak but full of life and introspection,
By
This review is from: Japon - Director's Unrated Edition (DVD)
The movie is somewhat disturbing, very raw, very artistic.
A weary man (with a love of art) from the city goes to the country seeking serenity, and then to end his life. He observes country folk, adults and children, and is initially pretty numb to it all. Over time he seems to soften and cannot bring himself to commit suicide. He observes some of the simplest animalistic and human instincts. Taking a couple of chances to experience a bit more before he ends his life shows him how his actions may have affected others. Be warned, there is some sexual footage in this film that is not for the squeemish!
14 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Amazing movie!,
By
This review is from: Japon (DVD)
This movie is original, powerful, and unconventional. A nameless man, an artist, comes to a remote, primitive Mexican mountain village to seek solitude and to commit suicide. He finds lodging in the barn of Ascen, a kind, generous, non-judgemental woman in her 80s. Whe Ascen's criminal gang of relatives threaten to destroy her barn for the cement blocks with which it is made, the man begins to regain a raison d'etre. The relationship between the man and Ascen is complex. Trust and love build between the two, primarily, due to Ascen's quiet, unswerving kindness and concern for the man. She shelters and feeds him, and he attempts to challenge the relatives who wish to destroy her barn. Ascen tells the man that losing her barn is not a problem for her; her relatives need the blocks more than she does. She has an uncanny sense of separating what is truly important from material issues.
The movie should not be explained further. It is for the audience to savor. There are scenes in this film which I have never seen performed so explicitly. The last scene cannot be shaken from my memory. The pace of this movie is often painfully slow, and dialog is sparse. The harshnes and glare of the land is emphasized in the overexpoed look of the film. You can feel the heat, desolation and hopelessness of the landscape. Yet Ascen's unquestioning kindness and charity prevail amidst drunkenness, poverty and the outrageous theft of her property. What is important is kindness, charity and love. I loved the structural simplicity of this film, and the ontrasting ccomplexities of the relationship between Ascen and the artist. When the movie ends, one has the feeling of having moved further toward understanding the nature of love This is a remarkable first film by a new director. WOW!!!
9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
a new director Carlos Reygadas on the horizon,
By
This review is from: Japon - Director's Unrated Edition (DVD)
A handsome middle age arthritic painter travels to a remote
part of Mexico to commit suicide. He seeks refuge from a lonely lady in her mid eighties who is being cheated out of her home by relatives where the painter is staying. The painter and the old lady become close and sex follows, difficult for the camera and the actors and viewers of this film. (I assume) No American film could ever film this and if they could,it would not be with this realism.
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