Cinema Tropical

MISS BALA: A Beauty Queen as a Stand-In for a Nation in Shock

 

By Naief Yehya


We are on the cusp of a new era of Mexican cinema in which the bitter reality imposed by the war on drug trafficking is finally being treated as a film-worthy subject, used both as entertainment and to invoke moral reflection. In the past, Mexican cinema has been characterized by decades of implicit censorship of any criticism of the governing PRI party or the military. This new wave of cinema, and the collapse of the archaic structures governing the content, budgets and distribution of movies, coincides with the intensification of a grand-scale conflict: the mutual bloodbath between cartels and the government that has made the civilians daily collateral damage. With so much violence, the Mexican population, confused and terrorized, has lost the ability to understand or act and culture has come to a virtual standstill.

The critical and economic triumphs that Mexican cinema has seen in recent years has help us transition from institutional revolutionary silence to a state of euphoria and complacency that has resulted in cultural standstill. While this moment of chaos could lead to a wave of grotesque narco-cinema that exploits the atrocious violence contaminating society, Gerardo Naranjo (Drama/Mex and Voy a explotar) has chosen a different approach with his latest film, Miss Bala. The movie was inspired by the case of Laura Zuñiga, Miss Sinaloa 208, who was arrested along with a number of members of the Juarez Cartel. The young Laura Guerrero (Stephanie Sigman) dreams of participating in the Miss Baja California pageant. She ends up surviving a shoot-out at a local club, but the friend who brought her there is missing. Instead of escaping, Laura tries to find her friend and winds up involved with the boss of the fictitious Star Cartel, who forces her to work as a driver and mule in exchange for not killing her father and her brother. This same boss later buys Laura first place in the pageant.

 Naranjo didn’t intend to do a film that explores the complexities and strategies of organized crime, nor did he originally want to make a film about narco-trafficking. This fact has caused mixed reactions; while there are those who praise the film for its indirect and emotional approach to narco-trafficking, others have accused it of being cowardly, misleading or complacent (especially since the crew had to pay off a local cartel during the filming). Naranjo makes it implicit that the Star Cartel traffics narcotics, but “does not include images of drugs,” as Miriam Canales pointed out in an interview for the magazine, Replicante. What he did aim to show was the condition of the victim, an innocent young girl who finds herself tangled up in an incomprehensible web where power figures operate with criteria that she doesn’t understand, where her free will is irrelevant, and where she risks being sacrificed at any moment and for any reason without anyone to protect her. The only sure thing about Laura, who even loses her name, (baptized “Canelita” by the drug traffickers’ boss), is her vulnerability. Faced with the dilemma of how to tackle such a painful and difficult subject, Naranjo avoids the temptation of sensationalism and opts to show the emotional impact of war neither from the viewpoint of the corrupt authorities nor the criminals.

The main attribute of Miss Bala is not its realism but its almost dreamlike narrative flow in which Laura seems to float from situation to situation. Laura represents the condition of a society paralyzed with fear, shock and often involuntary complacency. There is no redemption and there is no consolatory justice, but there also isn’t a sense of exploitative desperation. What we see is a snapshot of the everyday tragedy that has turned these people into cannon fodder.

Naief Yehya (1963) Industrial engineer, journalist, writer and cultural critic. His work deals mainly with the impact of technology, mass media, propaganda and pornography in culture and society. His most recent book is Technoculture (Tusquets, 2008).

 





Latin American Films Snubbed for this Year's Oscars

 

The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences released this morning its shortlist of nine films to compete in the Best Foreign Language Film category for this year's edition of the Oscars, and surprisingly no Latin American films were included in the list. The only Latin American reference in the shortlist was the Danish filmSuperclásico directed by Ole Christian Madsen which is set and was shot on location in Buenos Aries.

The strongest Latin American candidate to make it to this year's shortlist was the Mexican submission Miss Bala by Gerardo Naranjo, which opens in New York and LA this Friday, January 20. Mexico has been nominated in eight occasions and has never won the award for Best Foreign Language Film. In the past few years only Argentina has taken home the coveted award for El secreto de sus ojos / The Secret in their Eyes by Juan José Campanella in 2010.

 





PORFIRIO; LAS ACACIAS and FOUND MEMORIES Selected for New Directors/New Films

 

Three Latin American films have been selected to participate in this year's edition of the New Directors/New Films Festival that is jointly organized by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and The Museum of Modern Art. Both organizations announced today its initial seven official selections, almost half of them coming from Latin America: Pablo Giorgelli's Las acacias from Argentina, Alejandro Landes' Porfirio (pictured) from Colombia; and Lúcia Murat's Historias que so existem quando lembradas / Found Memories from Brazil. The 41st edition of New Directors/New Films, dedicated to "the discovery of new works by emerging and dynamic filmmaking talent" will take place from March 21 through April 1 in New York City. 





THE TINIEST PLACE Wins Spotlight Award at the Cinema Eye Honors

 

Tatiana Huezo's debut feature film El lugar más pequeño / The Tiniest Place (pictured), was the recipient of the Spotlight Award at the 2012 Cinema Eye Honors for Nonfiction Filmmaking that took place last Wednesday at the Museum of the Moving Image in New York City. The Spotlight Award is for "those films that haven't yet received the attention they deserve." New York audiences will have a chance to see the Mexican production soon as it will be shown as part of the Cinema Tropical Festival at 92YTribeca on Sunday, January 22.





Brazil and Chile Competing for Rotterdam's Tiger Award

 

The Rotterdam Film Festival announced today the 15 films competing for its 2012 Tiger Awards Competition (for first and second featured films) in its 41st edition, which include two productions from Brazil and one from Chile: Kleber Mendoça Filho's O som ao redor / Neighbouring Sounds and Eduardo Nunes' Southwest / Sudoeste (Brazil); and the Chilean road movie De jueves a domingo / Thursday Till Sunday by Dominga Sotomayor. It was also announced that Brazilian actress and filmmaker Helena Ignez (The Red Light Bandit) will be part of the this year's official jury. 







UN CUENTO CHINO; BOLETO AL PARAÍSO; MISS BALA and VIOLETA SE FUE A LOS CIELOS Nominated to the Goya Awards

 

The Spanish Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences announced today the nominees for the 26th edition of the Goya Awards, celebrating the best of Spanish cinema. In the Best Hispanic-American Film category films from four Latin American countries were nominated: Un cuento chino (pictured) by Sebastián Borensztein from Argentina; Violeta se fue a los cielos by Andrés Wood from Chile; Boleto al paraíso by Gerardo Chijona from Cuba; and Miss Bala by Gerardo Naranjo from Mexico. Additionally Mexican actress Salma Hayek also got a nomination as Best Actress for her work with director Alex de la Iglesia in his latest film La chispa de la vida. The winners will be announced at a special ceremony in Madrid on February 19.