oscar jubis
10-14-2007, 08:35 PM
You can tell Manda Bala director Jason Kohn apprenticed under Errol Morris by the way he develops disparate threads or subjects separately before showing their interconnection. Kohn also shares a droll sense of humor with the acclaimed director of Mr. Death and Fast, Cheap & Out of Control.
In Manda Bala (Send a Bullet), a kidnapping victim, a frog farmer, a surgeon who specializes in aural reconstructions, a gangster and father of ten from the Sao Paulo ghettos, a man who's made a fortune making the cars of the wealthy bulletproof, an attorney general, and the corrupt former senator and governor of a northern province help the half-Brazilian Kohn make the point that those who steal with a pen facilitate and encourage the epidemic violence characteristic of urban Brazil. But the link between institutional corruption and violent crime could be made more forcefully, and the idea that the culture that sustains them dates back to the early years of Portuguese colonization is treated as a mere afterthought.
What cheapens Manda Bala is the banality of its editing choices and its exploitative bent: graphic footage of surgeries and torture ordeals is prominently featured. The practice of using a translator to repeat in English what we've already heard in Portuguese (rather than simply subtitle the latter) is an added annoyance. I'm convinced there were better choices for the documentary Jury Prize at this year's Sundance Film Festival than Kohn's entertaining but lurid and amateurish debut.
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There have been many documentaries and fictionalized accounts of America's space program. The new In the Shadow of the Moon deals specifically with the Apollo missions. It pays most attention to Apollo 11, the first to land on the moon's surface, and Apollo 13, which ran into trouble before it was ingeniously saved from catastrophe.
Two reasons why In the Shadow of the Moon is a must-see even if you've seen many films about man's conquest of the moon: 1) The footage of the training of the astronauts, their voyages and landing on the moon has been restored visually and aurally. It is stunning, and some of it has not been previously available. 2) The astronauts have never been this disarmingly candid and revealing. They are remarkable men, most now in their 70s, sharp as ever, and perhaps wiser. Feeling down after watching the latest Iraq doc? Check out In the Shadow of the Moon for a "pick me up".
In Manda Bala (Send a Bullet), a kidnapping victim, a frog farmer, a surgeon who specializes in aural reconstructions, a gangster and father of ten from the Sao Paulo ghettos, a man who's made a fortune making the cars of the wealthy bulletproof, an attorney general, and the corrupt former senator and governor of a northern province help the half-Brazilian Kohn make the point that those who steal with a pen facilitate and encourage the epidemic violence characteristic of urban Brazil. But the link between institutional corruption and violent crime could be made more forcefully, and the idea that the culture that sustains them dates back to the early years of Portuguese colonization is treated as a mere afterthought.
What cheapens Manda Bala is the banality of its editing choices and its exploitative bent: graphic footage of surgeries and torture ordeals is prominently featured. The practice of using a translator to repeat in English what we've already heard in Portuguese (rather than simply subtitle the latter) is an added annoyance. I'm convinced there were better choices for the documentary Jury Prize at this year's Sundance Film Festival than Kohn's entertaining but lurid and amateurish debut.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There have been many documentaries and fictionalized accounts of America's space program. The new In the Shadow of the Moon deals specifically with the Apollo missions. It pays most attention to Apollo 11, the first to land on the moon's surface, and Apollo 13, which ran into trouble before it was ingeniously saved from catastrophe.
Two reasons why In the Shadow of the Moon is a must-see even if you've seen many films about man's conquest of the moon: 1) The footage of the training of the astronauts, their voyages and landing on the moon has been restored visually and aurally. It is stunning, and some of it has not been previously available. 2) The astronauts have never been this disarmingly candid and revealing. They are remarkable men, most now in their 70s, sharp as ever, and perhaps wiser. Feeling down after watching the latest Iraq doc? Check out In the Shadow of the Moon for a "pick me up".