Friday, May 7, 2010

Babies

Babies (Director: Thomas Balmès): I’d been enchanted by the trailer since I first saw it a few months ago. Described by its pro­ducer and ori­gin­ator Alain Chabat as “a wild­life film [about] human babies,” this doc­u­mentary observes four babies in dif­ferent parts of the world as they grow from birth to their first steps. Ponijao from Namibia and Bayarjargal from Mongolia live in wide-open rural envir­on­ments while Mari from Tokyo and Hattie in San Francisco grow up in more struc­tured urban set­tings. The film is strictly obser­va­tional; there is no voi­ceover and any par­ental dia­logue is pur­posely kept in the back­ground. What the film accom­plishes well is to allow us to com­pare these four devel­oping infants and note the sim­il­ar­ities and dif­fer­ences in their growth. We also get to see dif­fer­ences in par­enting styles, which gives the film some of its humour. For instance, the rural kids seem much more free to explore their envir­on­ments and their rela­tion­ships with animals grow out of neces­sity, since their fam­ilies’ live­li­hoods depend on live­stock. While the urban par­ents seem more involved in their children’s lives, there are fewer oppor­tun­ities for unstruc­tured play and acci­dental discoveries.

The dif­ferent loc­ales are all visu­ally inter­esting and the static cine­ma­to­graphy and long scenes allow the audi­ence to immerse them­selves in the per­spective of each baby. Since the focus in each scene is on the baby, and never on the par­ents, you come to feel you’re actu­ally watching each char­acter grow and change as the film progresses.

While I thor­oughly enjoyed Babies, I think it may be chal­len­ging for some audi­ences. To put it bluntly, I think the actual film may seem too high­brow for a mass audi­ence while the basic concept may turn off the art­house audi­ence as too com­mer­cial. Which isn’t to say it won’t make bags of money, at least for a doc­u­mentary. But some of my col­leagues found it boring, and lost patience with its long scenes and rather linear nar­rative arc. Mind you, none of them are par­ents. Neither am I, for that matter, but I found the chil­dren charming and was fas­cin­ated to see them lit­er­ally fig­uring out prob­lems as we observed. I think the “cute” factor will draw a lot of people on the film’s opening weekend, but its slow pacing and lack of dia­logue may lead to some less-than-positive word of mouth, which would be a shame. For the patient and child-friendly viewer, Babies delivers its fair share of rewards.

8/10(8/10)

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