| Index | 2 reviews in total |
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Bitter Sweet like dark chocolate, 16 September 2004
Author:
wanagi from France
This movie is really beautiful and must be seen more than once . It's full of magic and hope when very dramatic at the same time. The action takes place during the Mexican Revolution and we follow an adolescent couple (Diego Luna) and Ana Claudia Talençon(El crimen del padre Amaro)in a traveling circus through the country. Ana plays a clandestine newspaper's manager's daughter who fights against the dictatorship,and after her father is murdered she joins the circus under cover with a mission: providing Madero with the necessary money to continue the fight. She meets Victor (Diego Luna)a traveling circus ill manager's son. Both they are determined to save their romance and assist the revolutionaries. In the same time, we can see the beginning of the motion picture in the country and the earliest movie camera created by the "Lumière" brothers which Victor (Diego Luna)finds so fascinating. This film must be seen by any Diego Luna's fan. He's so natural in his acting and so "cute"in these young years... a few years before "Y Tu Mama tambien"!
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Victor and Valentina, 13 June 2006
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Author:
jotix100 from New York
This Mexican film directed and written by Jose Buil and Marisa Sistach,
takes us back to the beginning of the last century to the times when
the country was at the brink of the revolution that took place in the
1910's in that country.
We meet Victor, the son of the owner of a small circus that travels the
back roads of Mexico bringing their kind of entertainment to the
masses. Victor is befriended by Guy, a French man, who brought one of
the Lumiere cameras to the country and shows his films to the
unsophisticated crowds. Victor falls in love with the technology and
Guy, sensing the young man's eagerness, is happy to part with his
camera.
At the same time, we are taken to Valentina's house, where her father
is preparing pamphlets that are pro-Madero, who is in exile in San
Antonio. As the police raids the place, Valentina is able to hide in an
attic with the money that has been collected for the cause. After she
flees the house, she ends up at the circus. Victor takes a liking to
the young woman; it's clear he has fallen in love with the innocent
girl.
The saga of Victor and Valentina as they elude the police that is on
her trail is at the center of the action. The atmosphere of the circus
and its performers comes alive in the film. Victor's father is a dying
man and he expects his son to keep his trade, but the young man has
been bitten by the bug of the cinema as he films whatever strikes his
fancy with the primitive movie camera.
The DVD we recently watched was almost impossible to see because of the
dark tones used by the cinematographer, Gabriel Beristain. Most of the
time was hard to distinguish the actors against the mainly night action
of the film. One can't imagine if it was the directors intention, or
just the way it turned out, but be warned that most of the images are
almost lost in the dark backgrounds.
Victor Luna, a talented actor, is Victor. Ana Claudia Talancon plays
the beautiful Valentina. Carmen Maura makes an appearance as Lupe,
Victor's father companion. Patrick LeMauff is Guy, the French man who
introduces Victor to the world of cinema.
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