The first
film to arrive from LoveFilm from the recent additions, Babel has seen my List
update shoot me in the foot, as Babel is quite a long film that I’ve seen twice
before, once just before starting the List, and that to be in honest doesn’t
live up to its potential.
We follow
the lives of four groups of people, as their existences are disrupted by a
single bullet. First, there’s the poverty-stricken goat herder and his two
young, competitive sons who purchase a rifle to protect their flock from
jackals. We also have a wealthy American couple (Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett,
both excellent if trying a little too hard in largely thankless roles) as they
bicker their way through a holiday in Morocco. An Hispanic maid is forced to
take the two young children she cares for with her and her nephew (Gael Garcia
Bernal) to Mexico for her son’s wedding, and the deaf/mute daughter of a
successful Japanese businessman struggles to lose her virginity. The
multicultural cast is good, especially Rinko Kikuchi as the Japanese girl, who
carries most of her story arc single-handed, but there are several scenes that
are very difficult to watch – the younger of the goat-herder’s sons
masturbating within earshot of his brother, a disillusioned young boy witnesses
the chicken he is about to eat slaughtered in front of him and a troubled teen coming
on very strongly to her dentist.
The film
is entirely humourless, with barely a smile to be seen either onscreen or off,
and it lacks the finesse of director Alejandro González Iñárritu’s Amores
Perros. That, and the entire thing is thoroughly depressing, with only some
interesting scenes – a nightclub seen from a deaf perspective – to pique the
interest.
Choose
life 6/10
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