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tadiv Blog

[REVIEW] Evil hidden within great beauty.

Under discussion:

Blood Diamond  (2006)

Manda Bala  (2007)

Out of Balance  (2007)

City Lights Pictures, in association with Whitest Pouring Films and Kilo Films, presents Manda Bala (Send a Bullet), a film by Jason Kohn. The film runs 85 minutes and is not rated by the MPAA.  Based upon some of the hostage video content, this film would likely be rated NC-17 by the MPAA.

 Manda Bala is a documentary film covering several social and economic issues in modern Brazil.  These issues include political corruption, the kidnapping of the wealthy by the poor, and resulting industries such as frog farming, specialized plastic surgery, Helicopter taxi service, and the retrofitting of automobiles to make them more or less bullet-proof.

Very well photographed and cleanly edited, Manda Bala, to a great extent, lacks a central theme.  This picture has a good, complimenting soundtrack.  Because of a mixture of translation and subtitles, the presentation is at times awkward for the viewer.

Manda Bala greatly benefits from stunning cinematography.  However, while watching this film I recalled a scene from Finding Forrester where the audience reads criticism that says “Where are you taking me?”  And so, while there is stunning cinematography, there is a similar magnitude debt in the way of communicating the central point.  There is a lack of content that ties everything together. 

Stunning cinematography is the highlight of this picture.  Without making a study of Brazil, one would never imagine that its modern cities are so very beautiful.  To contrast the beauty of the modern high-rise buildings and seemingly clean streets, we see the slums at the edge of the metropolis falling away from the center like the crumbling slopes of a pillar in Monument Valley.  Suburbia does not seem to exist around these mountains of wealth, just poverty and squalor.  All of this is richly photographed and presented.  The only portions of the film that do not stand out from a cinematic perspective are some of the views of the frog farms and some views of the poorer areas of the country. 

The picture, after a view of a modern Brazilian city, starts in the country at a frog farm.  One of the two who run the farm is interviewed and is reluctant to talk about “the scandal”.  Farther in the presentation we find that the scandal was a corrupt politician’s alleged embezzlement of public funds intended to be seed money for new frog farms in poorer areas of the country.

From the frog farm, we are transported into the city of Sao Paulo to meet “Mr. M.”  He is identified as a businessman and sounds like a transplanted American.  He tells of being robbed at gunpoint on the streets of Sao Paulo while stopped in traffic.  He discusses the crime faced in the city every day and methods used to foil the criminal.  These include carrying his real wallet in a hidden pocket and a criminal’s wallet that has only a bit of cash in it.  Also in his defense, he has a bullet-proof car.  His car is a turbo-charged Porsche 911 – maybe he would less of a target were he driving a Ford Taurus…  The Porsche, it seems, cost Mr. M about $415,000 US.  I don’t know why we are not told how much ear reconstruction surgery costs.

Moving on, we meet a pretty young woman who was a kidnapping victim.  Then we meet the plastic surgeon who replaces severed ears.  It seems that removing an ear is the kidnapper’s method of choice in making their point that they are not fooling around.  Then we meet a policeman who is part of the eighty-strong anti-kidnapping squad.  Then we meet a civil lawyer who has had the fortitude to sue an alleged corrupt politician, then back to “M” again.  He explains that the really wealthy travel by helicopter since nobody can walk up to you and demand money at gunpoint, and so we see the world’s largest fleet of privately-owned helicopters. 

On and on it goes – we move between the Dr, the victim, Mr. M, an assistant Attorney General, the policeman, a kidnapper, and, of course, the frog farmer.  During one of the frog farm sequences, we see a huge shipment of live frogs departing for JFK.  With a hint of related guilt, as in Blood Diamond, there is an inference that the United States supports the political corruption in that it purchases the product from the frog farms. 

While Manda Bala is a technically high-quality production, the presentation falls short in connecting the themes addressed.  We meet many Brazilians.  While they all have stories to tell, there is not a complete thread connecting them all.  Is the problem the political corruption? Or is it the crime that the leadership seems to choose not to address?  A presentation is made on the colonization of Brazil – is there an ingrained culture of raping the wealth?  Like Out of Balance, Manda Bala ultimately fails to pinpoint the issue; it fails to deliver a summation of the issues presented.  While it is very worth seeing, I’m not sure that it really gets the job done when it comes to making a solid point.  So there is evil hidden within the great beauty of modern Brazil – what a surprise!

posted on Tuesday, May 27, 2008 3:20 PM by tadiv


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