Friday, December 7, 2007

Drama/Mex (2006): B-


Director(s): Gerardo Naranjo. Screenplay: Gerardo Naranjo. Cast: Fernando Becerril, Juan Pablo Castaneda, Diana Garcia, Martha Claudia Moreno, Miriana Moro and Emilio Valdés. Distributor: IFC First Take. Runtime: 93 min. Rating: NR.

Gerardo Naranjo's sophomore feature, Drama/Mex, is as unhinged as its protagonists. The film plays out as an Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu hybrid, dubiously and forcefully trying to connect three stories that are uncoiling in Acapulco. The first is that of Fernanda (Diana Garcia), who runs into Chano (Emilio Valdes), her ex boyfriend, at a cafe; the next thing you know, they're in bed. In this case, the drama is that, familiar as it may seem, she already has a boyfriend named Gonzalo (Juan Pablo Castaneda). At the same time, another tedious narrative thread follows Mariana, who, just after being hired by fellow prostitutes, spots Jaime (Fernando Becerril)—a pretty-damn-old man who has such meaningless life that he basically goes to the city to kill himself—and gets him to feed her, entertain her, and shelter her. Despite its grand and promising opening sequence, filled with ambition and audacity, the main problem with Drama/Mex, of course, is its callously exasperating narrative; jaundiced to its very core, it ends up going all over the place, as we now find Gonzalo attacking Chano, Jaime at the club, Fernanda running all over the place, and Mariana buying anything she can. What starts out as a finely nuanced, audaciously handsome drama evolves into a frustrating imbroglio, with a familiar ending that fails to unite its narrative threads; culminating happily, yet with a profound feel—and, as odd as it may seem, such disaster can be pliantly interpreted, even appealingly. Indeed, Drama/Mex is not entirely with out its merit: Naranjo's mesmerizing camera work fits its milieu perfectly, and the fact that he studies his characters first, before sending them to ruin, is proof of its boundless self-confidence—all of which are perpetuated by the miraculous cast which beautifully portrays the dubious situations.

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