The other three are a varied lot. Language and an ambitious ruling metaphor aside, Pablo Giorgellis minimalist road movie Las Acaciasa sit-doc in which a taciturn truck driver hauls an Indian Madonna and her child from Paraguay to Buenos Aireshas little in common with the Brazilian quasi-horror flick, Hard Labor, made by Juliana Rojas and Marco Dutra. Stronger on paper than in execution, this first feature uses a São Paulo housewifes attempt to open a grocery store in a depressed economy to suggest a middle-class tenuously perched atop a morass of corruption, underdevelopment, superstition, exploitation, and filth.
More successful as cinema, Chilean director Cristián Jimenezs Bonsáiadapted from the short novel by Alejandro Zambra and also in Un Certain Regardis a tricky tragicomedy of student-boho life in which deadpan exchanges are enlivened by percussive blasts of teen spirit. This could have been unbearably smug, but the directors unsentimental evocation of youths eternal present and the movies funky Santiago ambience serves to mitigate the preciosity. Bonsái may be familiar, but it isnt banal. The movie is not bad, and these days, not bad is the new pretty good.
jhoberman@villagevoice.com
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