Posts tagged ‘Crab Trap’
“Ahora!: Latin American Cinema Now” comes to Chicago next Sat 8th
From January 8 through February 2, the Gene Siskel Film Center presents Ahora!: Latin American Cinema Now, a series of eight films sampling the latest trends from one of the most exciting frontiers of contemporary world cinema. Seven of the eight films (all but BROTHER & SISTER) are Chicago premieres.
The major political and economic shifts that have occurred south of the border in the last decade have been (more…)
Film of the week: El Vuelco del Cangrejo/Crab Trap
El Vuelco del Cangrejo/Crab Trap (Columbia, 2009)
Starring Arnobio Salazar Rivas and Rodrigo Vélez
Directed by Oscar Ruiz Navia
What can only be called as a cinematographer’s wet dream, “Crab Trap” (described as a weaving of documentary and fiction) is certainly a feast for the eyes. Each shot is like a still life portrait that hangs in your favorite art museum. The light is caught just right. The subjects of the photographs emote for the camera. The viewer thinks, “I want to be there, in that picture.”
But “Crab Trap” isn’t a portrait hanging in the Met, it’s supposed to be a film, ‘moving pictures’ that tell a compelling story about characters you love or love to hate. Unfortunately Navia directs the cinematic equivalent of a really pretty girl with no smarts- so nice to look at but you’d rather she didn’t speak. The film claims to be about the everyday life of the jungle village in La Barra, Columbia, and that it is. But I was left wondering, “What about La Barra? What are you trying to tell me? What is the point of your story?” (more…)

