Author Topic: Even the Rain - movie  (Read 3292 times)

Offline czech

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Even the Rain - movie
« on: April 16, 2011, 07:00:03 am »
In Even the Rain, Gael García Bernal plays a filmmaker making a movie in Bolivia about Christopher Columbus's colonization of the New World (think of something in the spirit of Werner Herzog's Aguirre: The Wrath of God). He's in Bolivia because, "You can negotiate things here. Hotels, transports, catering."

So Bernal's character is making a movie about exploitation, by doing some exploiting of his own — an irony that becomes increasingly apparent as the indigenous population in the village where he's filming begin to revolt against the government for raising the price of water. In one scene, Bernal chastises an official, saying he thinks the protesters "demands are reasonable. If someone earns $2 a day, he can't pay a 300 percent increase in the price of water." The official replies, "That's what I'm told you pay the extras." Burn. In the words of the trailer, "500 years [after the conquest] ... not that much has changed."

As the violence increases, Bernal's character is forced to sort out his own politics — not just his stated beliefs, which have always been anticolonialist, but his lived ones as well. The movie is diving into some big questions — imperialism, colonialism, Western entitlement, and whether moviemaking itself is inherently exploitative, among others — but it's hard to tell if it will ultimately address them in a way that's enlightening or patronizing. In other words, this is a trailer that does its job: We're going to have to see the movie to find out.

http://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2011/01/even_the_rain_trailer_gael_gar.html

Offline tecpaocelotl

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Re: Even the Rain - movie
« Reply #1 on: April 18, 2011, 07:44:56 pm »
I wonder if the undertones of the movie are towards Mel Gibson.

Offline tecpaocelotl

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Re: Even the Rain - movie
« Reply #2 on: May 20, 2011, 05:24:31 am »
They have it on Netflix.

Offline snail

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Re: Even the Rain - movie
« Reply #3 on: July 22, 2012, 10:25:12 pm »
Yes, it is streaming on Netflix.  I thought it was very well done, but of course it's a film geared more toward a non-Ndn audience.  That is to say, the main characters are nons, and the story is told primarily through their eyes as "witnesses."  Even the clear hero of the film, a Quechua man, is still more of a secondary character.  This may influence your opinion of it if you are trying to view it as a purely Native film.  But overall it is a very good movie.  And it has one of the most gut-wrenching depictions of Columbus and his brutality that I've ever seen on screen.