Keith Loh
January 16th, 2003, 03:03 PM
THE MYTHICAL STREETS
Cidade de Deus ("City of God")
dir. Fernando Mereilles starring: Matheus Nachtergaele, Seu Jorge, Alexandre Rodrigues, Leandro Firmino da Hora, Phelipe Haagensen
"City of God" is a brilliant film from Brazil following a group of kids from a slum outside of Rio de Janeiro as violence, mishaps and happenstance take their toll. One boy dreams of becoming a newspaper photographer while others descend into gunhappy petty crime. Having the look of a gritty documentary at once but also brimming with vision, I can't remember the last time I emerged from a cinema so eager to drink from the film's creative source. This film will likely be a favourite for the Best Foreign Film Oscar in March.
Director Fernando Meirelles and cinematographer Cesar Charlone have crafted a film of tremendous verve and authenticity. Spanning three decades, the film tells a series of interlocking stories concentrating on each character; folk tales that are funny, chilling and without judgment.
The some-time narrator of what is a collection of stories is 12-year old Buscape who at the beginning of the film is too scared to engage in petty thievery like the older boys in the favela, including his elder brother. However, others of his age are more than willing to plan greater heists in a bid to escape from poverty, among them a bushy haired nascent psychopath named Little Ze, a character who seems to be constantly followed by a cloud of dread.
During the eras depicted (60s, 70s and 80s) successive waves of youth gangs, each younger and more ruthless than their predecessors, each give rise to notable characters with colourful names and colourful stories behind them. Based upon real events, "City of God" has a documentary feel about it, defining gritty direction, but also told with plenty of style. The cutting and editing is playful, mirroring the action on the screen which is often comic action. It is the Latin American cousin to "Pulp Fiction" but told with the technical sensibility of the video age.
The secret to the success of "City of God" is in the wry flavour of each story. Neither judgmental nor overly farcical, the filmmakers behind this movie depict events much as anyone who might have witnessed them might relate them to friends years or decades after the fact. Even given the grainy nature of the scenes, and even the brutality of the acts, there is humour in the remembrance, where characters are bigger than life-size and the real events become legend. This is the mythos of the streets.
An example of this is in one of the shorter stories called "the story of the apartment". In this five minute interlude (which nevertheless sets the stage for important events to come), an apartment becomes a rough symbol for the cyclical nature of the movie. Tenants, petty drug dealers living a fast and loose existence, take control of the same apartment, one after another. Each supplanting the former tenant and taking over his territory, some lasting longer than the others. No matter who is in charge, the story remains the same.
Even given the sometimes slapstick feel of the stories, "City of God" has a rich literary structure. Each story links to the next, minor characters introduced early in the film become critical elements in the summing up. Younger boys grow up to become villains; patsies become heroes. Like all epics, happenstance and fate collide to provide just desserts. A brilliant, memorable film.
I saw this at the Vancouver Film Festival in September of 2002. It became not only the best foreign film of the year, it was my pick as the best film of 2002.
Opening this week in the U.S. and January 23 in Canada
Cidade de Deus ("City of God")
dir. Fernando Mereilles starring: Matheus Nachtergaele, Seu Jorge, Alexandre Rodrigues, Leandro Firmino da Hora, Phelipe Haagensen
"City of God" is a brilliant film from Brazil following a group of kids from a slum outside of Rio de Janeiro as violence, mishaps and happenstance take their toll. One boy dreams of becoming a newspaper photographer while others descend into gunhappy petty crime. Having the look of a gritty documentary at once but also brimming with vision, I can't remember the last time I emerged from a cinema so eager to drink from the film's creative source. This film will likely be a favourite for the Best Foreign Film Oscar in March.
Director Fernando Meirelles and cinematographer Cesar Charlone have crafted a film of tremendous verve and authenticity. Spanning three decades, the film tells a series of interlocking stories concentrating on each character; folk tales that are funny, chilling and without judgment.
The some-time narrator of what is a collection of stories is 12-year old Buscape who at the beginning of the film is too scared to engage in petty thievery like the older boys in the favela, including his elder brother. However, others of his age are more than willing to plan greater heists in a bid to escape from poverty, among them a bushy haired nascent psychopath named Little Ze, a character who seems to be constantly followed by a cloud of dread.
During the eras depicted (60s, 70s and 80s) successive waves of youth gangs, each younger and more ruthless than their predecessors, each give rise to notable characters with colourful names and colourful stories behind them. Based upon real events, "City of God" has a documentary feel about it, defining gritty direction, but also told with plenty of style. The cutting and editing is playful, mirroring the action on the screen which is often comic action. It is the Latin American cousin to "Pulp Fiction" but told with the technical sensibility of the video age.
The secret to the success of "City of God" is in the wry flavour of each story. Neither judgmental nor overly farcical, the filmmakers behind this movie depict events much as anyone who might have witnessed them might relate them to friends years or decades after the fact. Even given the grainy nature of the scenes, and even the brutality of the acts, there is humour in the remembrance, where characters are bigger than life-size and the real events become legend. This is the mythos of the streets.
An example of this is in one of the shorter stories called "the story of the apartment". In this five minute interlude (which nevertheless sets the stage for important events to come), an apartment becomes a rough symbol for the cyclical nature of the movie. Tenants, petty drug dealers living a fast and loose existence, take control of the same apartment, one after another. Each supplanting the former tenant and taking over his territory, some lasting longer than the others. No matter who is in charge, the story remains the same.
Even given the sometimes slapstick feel of the stories, "City of God" has a rich literary structure. Each story links to the next, minor characters introduced early in the film become critical elements in the summing up. Younger boys grow up to become villains; patsies become heroes. Like all epics, happenstance and fate collide to provide just desserts. A brilliant, memorable film.
I saw this at the Vancouver Film Festival in September of 2002. It became not only the best foreign film of the year, it was my pick as the best film of 2002.
Opening this week in the U.S. and January 23 in Canada