From the daily archives:

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

El Bola

by Jason Chu on June 5, 2007

in DVD, DVD Clubs, Film Movement

El Bola (Pellet)

El Bola (Pellet) (Director: Achero Mañas, Spain, 2000): Pablo’s nick­name is Pellet, hence the title of this film. I didn’t know any­thing about this film before pop­ping it in the DVD player, so I had no idea what kind of a ride I was in for.

The ride was great. Performances are authentic and at times, appro­pri­ately subtle. The actual sub­ject matter doesn’t arise until almost halfway through the film; a style that doesn’t always work, but def­in­itely does here.

Pellet loiters around town with some of his misfit, dare­devil peers and befriends the new kid at school, Alfredo. Alfredo provides Pellet with a simple camaraderie that Pellet seems to never have known before, and he is obvi­ously needy for this kind of friend­ship. Still, he ini­tially feels out of place in cer­tain situ­ations, such as spending time in Alfredo’s family envir­on­ment; granted, Alfredo’s family envir­on­ment may not be the most “normal”, but we soon see why Pellet is tentative.

El Bola (Pellet)

The film touches indir­ectly on a lot of themes and situ­ations that are not very developed, but I appre­ciate the real­istic snap­shot of time-and-place that this method provides; they also work to advance char­ac­ters rather than plot. We never really get the story on some of the sup­porting char­ac­ters but it ends up not really mat­tering; somehow the subtle oddities of cer­tain people and events gives the film a “truth is stranger than fic­tion” sort of backdrop.

I was very impressed with the lead actor Juan José Ballesta, who played the title char­acter at only thir­teen years of age. I didn’t recog­nize him at first, but later real­ized that I saw him in person a couple of years ago at TIFF when he was in town to pro­mote the film 7 vírgenes.

El Bola is a powerful film that deserves the many awards and nom­in­a­tions that it received. It is a moving story that is painful at times and heart­warming at others. It authen­tic­ates itself through its pho­to­graphy, char­ac­ters, per­form­ances and sadly, the story itself. I think that Jay would con­sider this to be a “Jason Chu film”, so it’s no sur­prise that many moments of it recall Truffaut’s Les Quatre cents coups (The 400 Blows).

Note: Film Movement fea­tured this film as their Year 1 Film 1. That’s right, it was their very first pick. As an added bonus, the film is on sale right now for half price, making it a bar­gain even for non-subscribers to Film Movement’s service.

Official site for the film (Spanish only)

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Death Note

by James McNally on June 5, 2007 · 4 comments

in DVD

Death Note (Desu nôto)

Death Note (Desu nôto) (Director: Shusuke Kaneko, Japan, 2006): Based upon a very pop­ular manga, Death Note has since been made into an anime tele­vi­sion series, but this live-action ver­sion, along with its sequel, Death Note: The Last Name, ruled the Japanese box-office last year. The concept seemed inter­esting: Light Yagami is a law stu­dent and son of a local police invest­ig­ator, hoping to follow his father into a career involving the law. One night he finds an empty note­book that prom­ises “The human whose name is written in this note shall die.” Pretty soon, crim­inals all over Japan are drop­ping like flies, and the police are trying to track down the vigil­ante respons­ible for these mys­ter­ious deaths. They call in the elu­sive “L” (described ludicrously as “the world’s top detective”) to help them crack the case. Later, we find out “L” is just a sullen teen­ager with a sweet tooth, but that makes about as much as sense as the rest of the movie.

I’ve pre­vi­ously men­tioned my interest in Japanese anime, but I’ve never really gotten into manga in a big way, mostly because this type of fic­tion gen­er­ally sac­ri­fices char­acter and believ­able plots in the interest of keeping the action going and appealing to their chosen demo­graphic. All these flaws are present in this film adapt­a­tion of the manga. The very fact that both prot­ag­on­ists are teen­aged boys living in Japan seemed funny, but that was nothing com­pared to some of the plot holes and stun­ning coin­cid­ences neces­sary to move this story along to its con­clu­sion. Death Note makes Japan look like a nation bursting at the seams with violent and unre­morseful psy­cho­paths, when in reality the crime rate is quite low. And there are really no sym­path­etic char­ac­ters at all, since Light, who started by trying to rid the world of crime, ends up killing anyone who gets too close to finding out who he is.

The film is slickly made, for the most part (well, except that the “Reaper” who ori­gin­ally dropped the note­book for Light to find looks like a giant grin­ning mari­on­ette). But it’s unbear­ably silly. Death Note is obvi­ously enter­taining for many people, judging by its com­mer­cial suc­cess; just not people like me, I guess.

Official site for the film

5/10(5/10)

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