Amores Perros (2000)
D: Alejandro González Iñárritu
S: Emilio Echevarría, Gael García Bernal
S: Emilio Echevarría, Gael García Bernal
Attempting to discuss influence in postmodernism is like trying to
extract a wave from a maelstrom. Amores Perros is a
hyperkinetic portamento of interconnected narratives all of which are centrally
concerned with the seedier side of life in modern Mexico. You can, if you wish,
trace its lineage to Quentin Tarantino and Guy Ritchie, or you can go further
back into the crime genre and the melodrama to find the roots of the individual
tales. As a colleague of mine remarked, the second of the three tales,
featuring the doomed romance between a model and a magazine editor is like
something from an Antonioni film, only the master of Italian art house cinema
would have done it in ten minutes. The first is a tale of dog fights and
low-key gangsters not far from what Ritchie did in Snatch. The
finale following the adventures of a hobo hit man has echoes of Le
Samourai and other
existential tales of outsiders looking in upon human foibles with a jaundiced
eye. You can even approach the film from a surrealist perspective, tracing its
blend of the outrageous and the realistic to the spectre of Luis Buñuel (Los
Olvidados), whose Mexican period was his most fertile and
challenging. Ultimately though, the strands of influence upon the aesthetic and
narrative dimensions of the film are so numerous as to not bear close
reference. It is a postmodernist pastiche, and as such any and all such
references have less to do with deep meaning than they do with ephemeral
affect.
The stories themselves are drawn from an experience of contemporary
Mexico which the director and writer presumably considers representative, or at
least authentic. As such the grainy photography featuring images of poverty,
social deprivation, familial and religious claustrophobia are only as expected.
Their ferocity and the energy with which they have been edited together is
perhaps less so. The movie begins with an in-joke which references Reservoir
Dogs (itself replete with reference to City on Fire and The
Killing... the spiral goes ever on) as two young men ride screaming in a
car with a bloodstained companion. In this case the companion is a dog, but the
rapid camera movement, the sounds of screaming on the soundtrack, the gore, and
the punch of starting with a violent car chase is pure sensationalism. This
type of visual excitation goes on, but it does not quite cover up the basic
generic nature of the stories. The pace changes but the imagery attempts to
remain edgy and arty. The second story takes a more restrained approach, but it
has unusual elements involving a dog hidden under the wooden flooring of an
apartment which keeps you off balance. The third and final tale is also more
measured, and because it involves a homeless character, provides the most
sustained (and effective) look at the high and low life of the city seen
through the filter of genre storytelling.
Amores Perros is a remarkable achievement. Its scale is impressive, running a
good two and a half hours without running out of steam. It has been assembled
with skill in craft and working on a budget considerably less weighty than many
of its Hollywood equivalents, it was always bound to attract some level of
admiration. But though the film deserves to be seen and has its points of
interest, it is neither groundbreaking nor surprising in any respect other than
the fact of where it has come from. Its social analysis has been surpassed many
times, its pace and tone are bogstandard within postmodernism, its visceral
entertainments are likewise unremarkable. Though they may be impossible to
separate from the film on the whole, the strands of other movies have simply
made this little more than an amalgam of clichés enlivened by an unfamiliar
setting. For local audiences, this will probably rightly prove exciting, for
international audiences it may represent a kind of sledgehammer with which to
attack mainstream versions of the same thing, but in the end it boils down to
less than the sum of its parts.
The movie actually improves as it goes. The first instalment is
frequently juvenile and hysterical. The romantic sub plot is pure soap opera, a
tale of lovers torn by tradition and a desperate attempt to get enough money to
get out which depends upon its frequent bursts of explicit violence in the dog
fights to hold attention at all. It is here of course that the somewhat
heavy-handed symbolism of dogs begins to become obvious. Comparisons between
the personalities and behaviours of men and canines are far from incidental,
and the movie delights in throwing in as many images of the latter as possible
to reinforce the point. The second instalment brings the title into semantic
play as a beautiful woman becomes a 'bitch' as her love dies. There is some
reasonable acting in this section, and there are some intense scenes of bitter
confrontation which hit home. On the whole though, apart from the element of
the dog under the floorboards, this is again familiar stuff with no real twist
to it. The last part of the movie is the most engaging, built upon a strong,
understated performance from Gustavo Muñoz, the hobo with a pack of dogs
following him who has more purpose than many of the 'respectable' people who
seem to 'hound' him. Though again predictable, the revelation of his backstory
and scenes of emotional catharsis which deepen the characterisation are
effective in this case, largely thanks to the quiet direction and Muñoz'
acting.
Wildly overpraised in some quarters, Amores Perros is
worth a look if you have a strong stomach and a taste for world cinema. It is
not so exciting that it demands viewing, but it should prove worthwhile for
cinephiles, film students, and fans of world cinema in general. Do not expect
it to change the world though: postmodernism does not have that kind of power.
All it can do is blur our conceptual and perceptual boundaries to a point where
we either lose interest or lose hope.
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