The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo – first-look…

In strik­ing open­ing cred­its, boil­ing cop­per pours from atop a grey moun­tain like lava, a slug­gish, pow­er­ful cur­rent that exists as a dichoto­my: the light it pow­ers shines over the lands it’s made bar­ren. This mes­mer­iz­ing sequence is how we are intro­duced to Diego Céspedes’s atmos­pher­ic fea­ture debut, The Mys­te­ri­ous Gaze of the Flamin­go, where sex is also a pow­er­ful cur­rent and, in that, a dichoto­my of its own.

It’s 1982 in a small min­ing vil­lage in Chile, where the men have two options for enter­tain­ment: vio­lence or sex. More often than not, the two inter­twine, aggra­vat­ed by a lin­ger­ing sense of shame asso­ci­at­ed with iso­lat­ed cor­ners of the world that were once unpop­u­lat­ed and sud­den­ly filled to the brim with male labour­ers — adult women are scarce. There­in comes the cabaret run by Mama Boa, home to a live­ly, love­ly group of cross­dressers with bed­rooms filled with a rota­tion of hun­gry chasers.

Get more Lit­tle White Lies

When enter­ing Mama Boa’s house, all her daugh­ters are reborn, bap­tized with a new name after an ani­mal. Boa bestows the name Flamin­go to one of her most beau­ti­ful girls, tak­en by her ever-long, gra­cious legs. Flamin­gos, the strik­ing­ly pink birds, begin to lose their colour in the nest­ing peri­od, hor­mones tak­ing away their one sin­gu­lar fea­ture. But Flamin­go the per­former is the oppo­site: when baby Lydia turns up on her doorstep, she imme­di­ate­ly steps into moth­er­hood, becom­ing even more sin­gu­lar, fuller. Flamin­go is a moth­er, but a bird, too, and to the men in the vil­lage, she is one to hunt.

VEJA  The Disappearance of Josef Mengele – first-look…

Céspedes’s labyrinthine dra­ma flirts with absur­dism in build­ing a real­i­ty where the dark sores that mark the skin of the men who cross paths with Flamin­go are not a virus eat­ing away at the body, but the evil con­se­quence of a mys­te­ri­ous plague, trans­mit­ted through look­ing into each other’s eyes. Inter­est­ing­ly, the Chilean direc­tor also nests his debut with­in the lines of a clas­sic West­ern, the min­ers fash­ioned as gun­sling­ing bad­dies kick­ing at the creak­ing wood­en doors of Mama Boa to wreak hav­oc in search of revenge — and a cure they know won’t come.

It’s a cap­ti­vat­ing exer­cise in cap­tur­ing a spe­cif­ic social malaise, more specif­i­cal­ly, how the AIDS epi­dem­ic was felt out­side the bustling metrop­o­lis where con­ver­sa­tions around queer­ness hap­pened in still hos­tile but much more open forums by com­par­i­son. Seen most­ly through the eyes of 12-year-old Lydia as she grap­ples with her mother’s curse, this often ten­der dra­ma does not shy away from the bru­tal­i­ty queer bod­ies are often sub­ject­ed to but rebels against mak­ing it its grav­i­ta­tion­al cen­tre. Despite the blood that stains dirt and skin alike, this earnest debut is quick to jump back to com­pas­sion, arms that hold one anoth­er with ease, laugh­ter that echoes through shal­low quar­ries, beau­ty that refus­es to dim under the weight of ostracisation.

VEJA  Body found as chilling torture rumors collapse – We Got This Covered

In its ambi­tion to grab many things at once — both for­mal­ly and the­mat­i­cal­ly — The Mys­te­ri­ous Gaze of the Flamin­go stands as if on the legs of its tit­u­lar bird, a tad wob­bly and unsure. But its wob­bli­ness also makes it deeply inter­est­ing to look at. Angel­lo Faccini’s stun­ning cin­e­matog­ra­phy plays with depth to expand small crowd­ed rooms as if entire uni­vers­es and con­strict the vast­ness of the desert to ampli­fy its inescapa­bil­i­ty, and Cés­pedes pop­u­lates these spaces with a mix of pro­fes­sion­al actors and first-timers. This assured deci­sion allows not only for the raw­ness required from such an aching tale of found love and fam­i­ly, but that also turns this con­fi­dent debut into a dis­play for fresh tal­ent — none more so than its promis­ing young director.

To keep cel­e­brat­ing the craft of film, we have to rely on the sup­port of our mem­bers. Join Club LWLies today and receive access to a host of benefits.

Postagem recentes

DEIXE UMA RESPOSTA

Por favor digite seu comentário!
Por favor, digite seu nome aqui

Stay Connected

0FãsCurtir
0SeguidoresSeguir
0InscritosInscrever
Publicidade

Vejá também

EcoNewsOnline
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.