Competition
Dir. Gustavo Loza
Taking into consideration that
his mother is a crack-addict, it is not difficult to guess why the
round-faced big-eyed 7-year-old protagonist of the movie has such a
strange and not at all Mexican name Hendrix. In the song written by
Serge Gainsbourg back in 1978 and called “Ex Fan des Sixties” Jane
Birkin missed the legendary black guitarist together with all those who
were the meaning of her youth - Brian Jones, Janis Joplin etc. That is
not the case with the Mexican Nina. All their bequests and they
themselves are still a part of her life. Only her own son Hendrix is
calling for his Mom in vain at night. So Nina’s friend, the lesbian
Ivana settles him with a family of gays, who have finally registered
their marriage after ten years and who live in an impeccable house with a
swimming pool. She herself is busy talking her brother into becoming a
sperm donor for her friend’s egg cell, which Ivana wants to implant and
then give birth to a child.
When one of the gays brings home an
unknown boy, everyone is amazed - not merely the servants, but the
newlywed, who is having a hangover, as well. During the first hour it is
a sitcom familiar from Latino TV series with melodramatic and criminal
injections. Servants and maids who have too many personal opinions,
nevertheless do their job thoroughly, dusting photo albums like “Big
Penis Book”, where the quirkier the fantasies of the rich, the larger
their hearts, and by means of which housewives are given the right idea
in an accessible language of easily foretold mishaps that all people
are equally necessary and important.
But towards the end, when
the boy is sent to the orphanage, the sodomites go to court and the
lesbian is undergoing surgery at the Huston clinic of artificial
insemination, the movie will reveal the contrast, which is probably the
deepest for modern society. It is the contrast between what the
establishment of today approves and what it tries to push away into he
sphere of denunciated, the shocking TV news. The former is everything
sterile, impersonal, orderly and artificial, like that insemination. And
the latter is everything that lives and breathes. The former is
created by the familiar (at least from Paul Anderson’s “Magnolia”)
technique of monotonous enumeration achieved by cutting. The latter, the
image of the living world which is being ousted, is the sole
responsibility of Nailea Norvind playing Nina. While most actors are
content with creating familiar stereotypes, Norvind resorts to “acting
shrieks”, but communicates the sexual challenge, the animal dependence,
Nina’s tears of helplessness and of that other world. This is important
for the hierarchy of meanings in the film. The world of Hendrix’s blood
mother. And it was Hendrix who caused all the hubbub. It is interesting,
that the father of this fantastic actress was the Russian count Pavel
Chegodayev Saxon. And her mother was an eminent psychotherapist Eva
Norvind, who was hired in Hollywood to train Rene Russo in the sexual
behavior, with which she flabbergasted us 12 years ago in “The Thomas
Crown Affair”.
Alexey Vasiliev
01-07-2011
The Other Family / La otra familia
Published in
Festivals