Monday, December 3, 2007

Live-In Maid (2004): B

Director(s): Jorge Gaggero. Screenplay: Jorge Gaggero. Cast: Norma Aleandro, Norma Argentina, Elsa Berenguer, Hilda Bernard, Monica Gonzaga, Susana Lanterí, Claudia Lapacó and Marcos Mundstock. Distributor: The Film Sales Company. Runtime: 83 min. Rating: NR.

Jorge Gaggero's first feature, Live-In Maid, is a pleasant surprise. The film stars Norma Aleandro as Beba, a bourgeois woman on the verge of a nervous breakdown right before late 2001, when Argentina's economy, already substantially weakened, reached an unprecedentedly bad state. This said, the film's other main protagonist is Dora (Norma Argentina), Beba's live in maid who's already worked at the there for thirty years. As Dora starts to realize that her quite moody boss has barely enough money to pay substantial victuals (as well as her own wage), she decides to take off. It's here where Gaggero's film, especially as his exceedingly nuanced script and wonderful camera work further evoke the time and place, reaches superlative heights—an aspect that only aids the film's astute commentary; essentially, Gaggero recognizes them—especially Dora—as real people. As Beba and Dora's relationship heightens off of the realization that each has his/her identity, their, as well as the film's intimacy, grows by a fantastic amount. Gaggero's script also recognizes the warmth among them; at times funny, piercing, and poignant, it gains heft as it goes along—finally resulting, despite superfluous aesthetic thrust, in a true friendship, as well as something to truly ruminate about.

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