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Babel - releases Friday

Babel, directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu (for which he won the Best Director award at Cannes) and written by Guillermo Arriaga, has gotten press for the controversies surrounding the director and the screenwriter. But the focus should be on the film itself. The movie that completes the trilogy started by Amores Perros and 21 Grams, Babel intercuts between four interconnected stories, often jumping time periods.

It is effing riveting. And bloody stressful. Once it sets the tone that nothing is going to go well, I sat the edge of my seat knowing bad shit was going to happen at every turn.

Warning – some spoilers ahead

At the core, Babel is a story about communication – the challenges we face due to different languages, different perspectives, in-built biases and different expectations. Richard (Brad Pitt) and Susan (Cate Blanchett) are on a vacation in Morocco. At the same time, two young goatherds are given a rifle by their father to keep the jackals away. Hmm, let’s see — two young boys have a gun. They have to test the gun. The tourists are in a bus. The bus passes by under the hill the boys are on. Of course, bad shit happens.

An injured Susan is taken to the closest town with a doctor (a veterinarian) as they wait for the US embassy to extricate them. At the same time, the boys are forced to deal with the consequences of their actions (read - bad stuff is going to happen).
In parallel we see the story of a Mexican nanny, Amelia (Adriana Barraza), who takes wonderful care of Mike (Nathan Gamble) and Debbie (Elle Fanning, who has the same gamin vulnerability as her sister Dakota). Amelia is desperate to go to her son’s wedding, but the parents of the kids are held up as the mother has to undergo surgery. So Amelia, after exhausting all other options, decides to take the kids with her to Mexico for the wedding. Bad, bad move, as we all know.

Goddamn it. I didn’t enjoy the wedding at all since I was waiting for the inevitable bad shit to happen. Fortunately for me, the wedding passed off fine, but then of course, bad shit does happen. The kids and Amelia are stuck wandering the desert. When Amelia is finally picked up, the immigration officers refuse to believe her story, refuse believe there are kids somewhere out there and they arrest her.

Also in parallel, we see the story of Chieko (Rinko Kikuchi), a deaf-mute Japanese schoolgirl, who lives with her father. Chieko is an emotional wreck after the death of her mother and she struggles with the fact that most normal guys will not make any effort once they discover her communication challenges. She is desperate for attention, for love, for validation. The need to feel worthy gets expressed sexually as she flashes boys at a restaurant and tries to french kiss her dentist in a desperate attempt to feel wanted.

As Chieko returns home, two police detectives are waiting for her. They want to talk to her father about a hunting rifle he may have gifted to his guide in Morocco. Much later that evening, after yet another rejection, Chieko calls one of the police officers. When he visits, she strips down and begs him to make love to her. Her eventual breakdown is quite heart wrenching.

There were three scenes that stayed with me

  • Richard and Susan have a difficult relationship. We don’t know why (at this point), but they are not very nice to each other. But once she gets shot, all that changes. There is a scene where Susan is in a hut in the village and she talks about dying. Then she talks about how she peed because she couldn’t hold it and that she has to pee again. Richard gets a pan, sits her up and holds the pan under her while she urinates. The intimacy of the moment, the history needed between a husband and wife to do that and emotion of what’s happened breaks down all walls and they kiss. The willingness to help another human being with one of the most private things, and the willingness to be helped, with no shame, with no disgust, with no apology happens so rarely and is perhaps one of the strongest bonding moments between a couple. It was mind-blowingly believable.
  • Amelia’s relationship with the children is beautifully constructed. You can see the love they have for each other. When Amelia is arrested, she asks about the kids and officer brusquely tells her they are not her kids. In tears, she talks about how she fed them and looked after them since they were kids… the officer brusquely cuts her off and threatens to deport her. Barraza did a brilliant job. I felt most sorry for her situation.
  • In the final scene of the movie, Chieke is standing at the balcony, completely naked. When her father comes home, he discovers her there. He walks up to her and neither of them says anything as he hugs her and she weeps. The camera keeps drawing back from their embrace –it flies backwards into Tokyo, keeping the building and Chieke and her father at the center.

The cinematography by Rodrigo Prieto was excellent. Different styles were employed for each story. Morocco was desolate, vast expanses, lots of wide angles. In the Mexico story, you could fee the heat and dust and in Tokyo, the techno-city comes to life. And the music was brilliant. Gustavo Santaolalla is to be highly commended for the guitar track that underlay the film. Exceptional.

Did I enjoy it? I guess I did. I was so damned stressed that I didn’t feel happy at any moment during the film. But I was glued to my seat, glued to the movie, praying that bad shit doesn’t happen, at least to the kiddies. Did I get my wish? You’ll have to watch the movie!

Note: This review is pre-release. I saw the film tonight (Wednesday) and it releases in the US on Friday.

Note 2: There was a discussion with Jon Kilik, one of the producers, before the screening. I cover that and Producing 101 here.

15 Responses to “Babel - releases Friday”

  1. Shyam Sundar on October 26th, 2006 5:51 am

    Alejandro González Iñárritu is a breath of fresh air. Spoilers notwithstanding, Babel sounds like a mustwatch….thanks for the (pre)review….

    Unlike Fernando Meirelles who followed the brilliant ‘city of god’ with the vapid ‘constant gardener’, Iñárritu seems to retain that unique sensibility which made ‘Amore perros’ and ‘21 Grams’ such delighful films to watch. Here is wishing more from this brilliant filmaker.

  2. t! on October 26th, 2006 6:20 am

    Now I am even more excited about seeing this film, thanks!

    Over the last few years there has been an amazing amount of creative filmmakers coming out of Mexico, Alfonso Cuarón, Guillermo del Toro, Carlos Reygadas among them, and it is really exciting to see how these filmmakers are taking the themes of the cultural shifts due to North American immigration, their own immigrations, and the issues of Mexican political and cultural ideologies and creating some of the most exciting, if hard to watch, movies being relesaed today, movies that you don’t have to be an American or a Mexican to appreciate….

    I wasn’t aware that Iñárritu considered this film part of a trilogy, but Cuarón and del Toro both have movies coming out this year, and the three filmmakers consider these three films to be a trilogy, all based on how people communicate. Watch out for Children of Men and Pan’s Labyrinth, both opening in December.

    Dang, the last part of this year is amazing for new releases….

  3. oz on October 26th, 2006 8:04 am

    - Ammores Peres is stuck way down below on my Netflix queue. On 21grams - the weight every body loses upon its death - I was too grief stricken within an hour of watching it… it was too bloodied - raw - jagged edged - reality in your face slap… too much to handle, I switched it off an hour after its start and went for a long walk…

  4. kartik krishnan on October 26th, 2006 8:12 am

    shit maan …im dying to see all the rest of his ‘multiple narratives films’. Saw 21 grams …(although it went over my head) …. i also wanna see amorres perros … and now babel !!! that too 4 stories simultaneously …Sounds a lot of fun

    I like these sort of scripts where the writer/director goes beyond of the same plot pt 1 - mid point - plot point 3 format … (Syd field) ..

    Sooraj ka saatvan ghoda, Pulp fiction, sin city, 21 grams, memento, butterfly effect, recently Yun hota to kya hota … Yuva

    This genre of writing is unexplored in indian cinema ….

  5. Vijay on October 26th, 2006 9:22 am

    It sure is good to know that the movie is captivating. I’ve been waiting for Babel forever. I’m attending a screening of it this Friday at Paramount Studios. I’m such a huge fan of Alejandro Gonzales Innaritu. Even bigger fan of the film’s writer Guillermo Arriaga. Thank for an early review.

  6. ravptor on October 26th, 2006 9:39 am

    Reality stinks and that’s what Alejandro thrives on. Amores Perros was a movie that was suggested to me right after cida de dues and the concept of making the four intervening stories so thrilling struck me. 21grams is an all time fav like the rest of cinema buffs but there is something in this guy’s film that makes you feel reality is better when its intensity is reduced a bit.

    Hope babel delivers…

  7. taxydriver on October 26th, 2006 10:41 am

    i think 21 gms stunk big time!
    Lives dont intersect all the time.
    amores perros is a great one though.
    will see babel,man push cart tommorow.
    may be will post a review (my first ever).
    How to post a review here?

  8. taxydriver on October 26th, 2006 10:55 pm

    wtf?

  9. sumeet on October 26th, 2006 11:08 pm

    Taxydriver you gotta post the review in the comment section and then wait for 2 mins… then shut the page and re-open it. If it doesnt get published you gotta shut down your computer and re-start it 3 times continously. Bham and you will see your review published… I am sorry if this doesnt work out you got to click the “CONTACT” option on the top of the page and leave a message saying you want to publish a review and get on the author’s board.. you also would have to make the owner believe that you are a great writer and why should he consider you amoong the 70 odd requests he gets daily.

  10. kartik krishnan on October 27th, 2006 1:21 am

    Sumeet :))
    U cldn’t have possibly been a little softer on the guy …

  11. taxydriver on October 27th, 2006 2:20 am

    WTF is this? doucherama?

    Does a passionate movie buff needs to be a
    fucking Dostoyevsky? was Pauline kael a great
    writer?

    [edited by admin: no verbal hate or abuse allowed]

  12. oz on October 27th, 2006 8:08 am

    - TD, Sumeet has a great sense of humor, it may not have come across to you… PFC is a place which doesn’t allow crap as you have mis-interpreted Sumeet’s comment to be. ease up. let it go. the goal here is to share and enjoy the passion. nothing more nothing less. use the contact form and do get in touch with me.

    i’m also working on something different where all movie mavericks will be able to write and share their opinions and views on movies and cinema.

  13. sumeet on October 27th, 2006 9:10 am

    @TaxyDriver… I was just trying to pull your legs man. Chill out.. it was meant to be funny. I apologise if it didnt come across the way it was meant to be.

  14. taxydriver on October 27th, 2006 1:28 pm

    sumeet - no need apologies,man.moving on.
    oz - thanks.

  15. striker on November 12th, 2006 7:45 pm

    finally got to watch this one today.. loved the cinematography and music.. and the best thing about the movie was probably the fact that brad pitt wasn’t “brad pitt”. wasn’t a big fan of 21g, but this one definitely held me all the way til the end. also, i felt that chieko’s track didn’t move the story forward at all. it was as if it didn’t even need to be there! overall, a definite one-time watch, but it’s one of those “could have been” films.. could’ve been great, but it ended at “pretty decent” instead.

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