Director: Lucía Puenzo
Writers: Lucía Puenzo (screenplay), Sergio Bizzio (short story “Cinismo”)
Genre: Drama
Genre: Drama
Country: Argentina
Language: Spain ( option: serbian subtitle)
Language: Spain ( option: serbian subtitle)
Year: 2007
Duration: 86 min
Stars: Ricardo Darín, Valeria Bertuccelli and Germán Palacios
The psychological fallout from alternative
sexualities is explored to subtle and penetrating effect in Lucia
Puenzo’s “XXY,” a study of teen angst that’s grounded in more than
simply nebulous emotion. Pic has more in common with standard
child-parent conflict dramas than it would probably care to admit, but
its sensitive treatment of an equally sensitive theme elevates it into
something memorable. Only drawbacks are some clumsy symbolism and a
slight tendency to be overly schematic. Plenty of fest exposure beckons
for Puenzo’s debut movie in which, unusually, accomplishment matches
ambition.
Along with her parents, marine biologist
Kraken (Ricardo Darin) and Suli (Valeria Bertuchelli), teen Alex (Ines
Efron) has left Argentina for Uruguay. Despite the title’s
foreshadowing, we have to wait a while before discovering the reasons
for the family’s move and Alex’s obviously alienated state: s/he’s a
hermaphrodite.
Alex, having reached puberty, must
decide about her future. But any decision is complicated by the arrival
of family friends, plastic surgeon Ramiro (German Palacios), Erika
(Carolina Pelereti), and their toothy son, Alvaro (Martin Piroyanski).
No sooner have they arrived than Alex is proposing outright to Alvaro
that they have sex together.
Meanwhile, Alex has
broken the nose of local boy Vando (Luciano Nobile) for casting
aspersions on his sexuality. After a grueling scene in which Alex is
near-raped by a gang of Vando’s friends, Kraken jumps to Alex’s defense.
When Alvaro finally takes Alex up on the offer of sex, they are caught
in flagrante delicto by Kraken.
The
split widens between the worlds of the adults, with their petty
rivalries, and the kids, who are discovering themselves sexually (Alvaro
is slowly realizing that he’s gay). It’s the kids, finally, who show
greater flexibility in coming to terms with their identities.
All
of this is communicated with the minimum of stylistic fuss — long shots
in true New Argentine Cinema style, plenty of windy-beach atmospherics
and dialogue that’s scant but emotion-rich (storyline proceeds through
just a few intimate conversations). Technique is at its best during a
lengthy nighttime beach scene in which Alex, Alvaro and Vando simply sit
there for a couple of minutes, the air heavy with inexpressible
emotions.
Perfs are fine, with Efron and
Piroyanski in particular exploiting the subtleties of the script to
gripping effect as their cat-and-mouse relationship develops. Efron’s
ambiguous sexuality is never in doubt; Piroyaski evokes much sympathy.
Darin
turns in a typically brooding perf as the father who wants the best for
his child but is uncomfortable with the truth about Alex. Thesp
shoulders one of pic’s key themes — how parents will claim to put their
children’s interests first while hypocritically controlling their sex
lives in accordance with their own fears and prejudices.
A
couple of characters could have been shed without doing undue damage to
either theme or plot: neither Ramiro nor Erika are able to punch their
dramatic weight.
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