the subtitle of bardo, Netflix movies from ghost When birdman Directed by Alejandro G Inarritu A handful of true false chroniclesHowever, as long as you attach the exaggerated postscript, Macbeth might be more appropriate: Sound and rage, mean nothinga lot of things happen bardo, Much of it is surreal. Elaborate musical numbers, dream sequences, alternate histories, and chronological hiccups are all woven into this sprawling, whimsical and personal film. But when the lights come on and the magic breaks, all that striking imagery feels remarkably empty.
to be fair Bardos The main character, famous Mexican journalist and documentarian Silverio Gama (Daniel Gimenez Cacho), is also tormented by the void. He is a man without a country, either in the sense that he spends his time between Mexico and the United States, or in a more abstract existential way. Silverio was a journalist. He then left his job and country to become an independent documentary filmmaker. Although he’s had great success in his new career, something still haunts Silverio. He is very insecure, but at the same time very self-centered. He may sound contradictory, but anyone who knows the artist knows that.
Bardo It feels like a sketchbook or a series of snapshots, combining mundane and profound moments to form a loose narrative about Silverio’s life. The story begins with the long-ago loss of a stillborn child, Mateo. Its death follows Silverio and his wife Lucia (Griselda Sicriani). Literally — Lucia leaves her delivery room and walks, dragging the boy’s umbilical cord. Its umbilical cord stretches endlessly, hanging like her tail from the bottom of her hospital gown.
From there Iñárritu leaps to Silverio’s imaginary reunion with his former frenzy. There he was humiliated on Mexican television by being accused by his former colleagues of being too good for his home country. next, another Jump, this brings us to the heart of the story: Silverio is the first Latin American journalist to receive a major award from the American Society and is celebrated on both sides of the border to celebrate. increase.
The events of the film suggest that Iñárritu crafts an autobiographical narrative with elaborate and stylized tropes.he is not a documentary Filmmaker, but his Academy Award – Best Director ghost; Best Picture, Best Director, Best Screenplay birdman — Provides neat and useful features that live up to Silverio’s big accolades. There’s also the fact that Cacho looks like Inarritu, and that the men come from the same economic and social privileged class.
Iñárritu flogs himself for his bourgeois sins. He demands to speak to the manager whenever an encounter doesn’t go his way.He ignores his son’s identity crisis — the boy grew up in both Mexico and California and feels like he belongs in neither — allowing his own reflection on what that means. While nursing, really meaningbeing Mexican.
Ultimately, that particular line of thought leads to Silverio smoking with Hernan Cortés (Ivan Massague) on a pile of Aztec corpses in Mexico City’s central square. Don’t worry, it’s all movies. A little pretend play, that’s all. The scope and artistry of the sequence are impressive, but as the culmination of 165 minutes of staring at the navel (this is his version of the cutdown; the original cut was his 179 minutes), it’s an adversarial note. Likewise, the wooper looper scene in early Surrealism where Silverio rides his L.A. Metro and swims in his feet of water at his feet is finally revived. But again, payoffs take too long to be worth the wait.
And these are two of the more compelling structural connections.many Bardo Made up of scenes that don’t relate to each other in any meaningful way, the film’s many time-jumps and flights of fantasy obscure the emotional truth at its core. , Silver Rio’s love for Lucia. But while not offensive to Sicriani or her presumed real-life counterpart, the one-dimensional hotties who stare lovingly at the camera, constantly begging for topless runaways, and have nothing else to do. There is nothing revolutionary about wives.
Making this self-indulgent film in a time when the egos of entertainment industry magnates have been smashed is an achievement of sorts. In fact, the egoism is so powerful that after a while it begins to erode the film’s humble façade, making this a really understated satire. or simply the shallowest collection of deep thoughts of the year.
A self-proclaimed truth-teller lying to himself to protect his ego is an interesting idea, and early in the film, Silverio says: But despite Iñárritu’s mild protests, Bardo I am serious about it. And that self-awareness is so limited that Iñárritu drones endlessly, creating an inverse relationship between his own self-seriousness and how seriously viewers tend to take him. reach the breaking point. The film’s title refers to the Buddhist concept of a boundary space between death and rebirth, which ultimately resonates in a different way than the creator intended. Bardo You end up saying nothing because you try to do too much.
Bardo: A handful of true false chronicles is now in wide theaters ahead of its December 16th release on Netflix.