Lower City Movie Review
Lower City Review

"Lower City" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Sérgio MachadoProducer : Robert Bevan,Mauricio Andrade Ramos,Donald Ranvaud,Walter Salles
Screenwiter : Sérgio Machado,Karim Ainouz,Adrianna Rattes,Gil Vicente Tavares
Starring : Lázaro Ramos,Wagner Moura,Alice Braga
Two guys on the ragged edge of poverty, a gorgeous young hooker who's sleeping
with them both, what could go wrong? If this were all that the emotional,
sweat-suffused Brazilian film Lower City was about, it would be the worst kind
of tedium. But while first-time director Sérgio Machado brings more to the
table than his skimpy script would warrant at first glance, what he adds is not
quite enough to make this the explosive debut he no doubt was wishing for.
Machado was at least smart enough to make the object of his male stars' (and
the camera's) attention fully able to deserve it, and then some. As 20-year-old
Karinna, the ridiculously gorgeous Alice Braga shares her aunt Sonia's strong,
sensual features and iconic aloofness; she's the center of attention in every
scene whether she likes it or not, effortlessly drawing in everyone around her.
Pity, of course, that the film had to take such an arresting actress and make
her a whore. But that's just what Lower City is about: a young whore from a
small Brazilian town who gets a cut rate on a ride on a boat to the big city of
Salvador by agreeing to sleep with the two men piloting it.
Best friends since childhood, the boat's owners, Deco (Lázaro Ramos) and
Naldinho (Wagner Moura), seem to be barely eking by, running small shipments on
their boat and trying to avoid falling back into the petty crime of their
younger years. It's a tough life, but seemingly not a bad one, interrupted by
two unfortunate events. The first is the arrival of Karinna, the second is that
bar fight they get into which results in Naldinho's being severely wounded.
After hanging around in Salvador during Naldinho's convalescence, Karinna
decides not to immediately abandon the lads, and so sets out sleeping with one
and then the other, proving in the end a pretty effective wedge issue. Women.
While it would be disingenuous to claim that Lower City has much in the way of
a feminist sensibility -- its star is after all a strangely sensitive hooker
who is also an exotic dancer, that much more opportunity for her to get
undressed on screen -- the film at least respects its lead actress more than
one might imagine. The film has a certain neo-noir descent to it, as Deco and
Naldinho's financial situation grows increasingly desperate they begin to plot
their own paths, at least one of which is strictly illegal. In that sort of
setting, with the main characters' morality heading steadily downward, the most
common or expected thing to see would be Karinna's degradation in some form.
But as much as she's torn between her men, and riddled with restless torment,
the film still somehow manages to keep her above the muck and mire. For all the
unwholesome customers she may sleep with, she still has the choice of whom to
love, and in the end it's the men who end up on the receiving end of each
other's fists, not her.
Although perfectly capable of creating living, breathing characters -- even the
rube-seeming Deco and Naldinho are sympathetic and attractive -- what Machado
cannot do in the end is craft a story of note. The film's rich and raw colors,
as well as its pungent though not overly sensational usage of Salvador's
grimier and less reputable districts, make for a visually rewarding experience.
But after a time, the poorly-drawn lines of this vague love triangle become
more and more indistinct, and the further these characters draw away from each
other, the less distinct they become. Love triangles make for great drama in
large part due to the claustrophobia; there's no room for anything but love.
Although we're not sure until the very end what will come of these three as
they try to explore life without the other, what's quite perfectly clear is
that the wait to find out is far too long.
Aka Cidade Baixa.
I wish I could live in the upper city.
|
Review by Chris Barsanti
|




