Perspectives
Dir. Frank Spano
The starting point for the
action in the film is the real extremal situation, resurrected on screen
with documentary shots of the wild outrage of nature. Streams of rain
water, sweeping away bridges, houses, streets. Unprecedented flood
happened on the North cost of Venezuela in 1999 – with 15 thousand
victims and many people disappearing without a trace. Information about
such disasters is branded upon our conscience just like that – in
illegible details and panoramic shots that all look alike. The author of
the film, famous actor Frank Spano, who’s debuting as a director,
changes wide shot for a close shot, whipping away two destinies from
this tragic whirl. He also points out the question, which is also
relevant for the audience: how do you survive, when everything is lost,
when your past has been swept away, and you are standing all alone with
your grieve.
Two protagonists: 40 year old Isabel and 17 year
old Yudeixi leave for Isabel’s native land – Spain, or to be more
precise - the Canary Islands, to start a new life and get a chance to
have some decent – maybe not future, but at least the present. They have
nothing in common, except the loss of their loved ones: Isabel has lost
her husband, and Yudeixi’s lost her child. Isabel – a medical nurse, is
a beautiful intelligent woman, filled with inner grace and unbearable
pain in the same time. That’s the way this character is portrait by the
Spanish actress Rosana Pastor. Her adolescent companion Yudeixi has
grown up on a street and was living on picking; she is daring and
rebellious. Despite the fact that Isabel perfectly recalls the face of
the girl, who has robbed her in a hotel’s hall just before the flood
happened, she is helping her to get on a plane, having presented herself
as her mother. From this moment on, their lives are tied together,
despite that they differ in just about everything – their outlooks on
life, their habits, manner and the way they talk – slang words that
Yudeixi uses is hard would be hard to find in a dictionary. And this
contrast creates the main strain of the action, centering on the
development of the heroines’ relationships, who has suddenly become
emigrants. Isabel will be telling her young friend that “thieving means
slowly dying”, and will explain who Hitchcock is and what suspense is.
Thought soon she will be forced to forget her principles and start
making money for a living by transporting illegal Peruvian workers from
the airport. And one day Yudeixi will run off with a big sum of money –
an advance received by Isabel from their employer – and tries to live
independently, working as a dancer. Fabulous Canary Islands – a
delightsome place for Russian tourists – is shown her from a different
perspective: without common landscapes, but through the eyes of those
who doesn’t relax, but works.
The final can be called a happy
ending – Yudeixi comes back to Isabel with the money, she earned. She
has now started to think about her life and not just about how to
survive, like before. Together with Isabel and a little Peruvian boy she
saved, they come back to Venezuela. And that’s how the transformation
of alienated people to a real family has finally happened – as well as
Frank Spano’s debut as director.
Tatiana Vetrova
30-06-2011
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