MPAA (UR would be PG-13) Fr. Dennis (4 Stars)
IMDb listing
Official Facebook
Official Dance Company Page
Cine y Tele article*
ABC7Chicago.com story about stage production
ABC.es artículo sobre producción teatral*
ViveLoHoy.com entrevista con Luis Lorente / Paloma Gomez*
Broken (orig. Rotas) [2016] (written and directed by Luis Lorente) is a SPANISH FLAMENCO-BASED film about domestic violence that PREMIERED recently at the 32nd (2016) Chicago Latino Film Festival.
I went to see the premiere -- in attendance being both the director Luis Lorente as well as the two lead ballerinas Paloma Gómez and Raquel Gómez -- in part because this Festival showcases not only dramatic films from Latin America but also film homages to other Latino contributions to the Arts.
In years past, I've seen two wonderful documentaries about the rich musical traditions of Cuba [2012] and Peru [2013] (the first I reviewed, the second though _excellent_ I did not); a surrealist homage to a, well ;-), surrealist artist (Alejandro Colunga) from Mexico [2014]; and a Chilean biopic about poet Pablo Neruda [2015]. This year's [2016] program featured a couple of documentaries about the music of Paraguay [1] [2] as well as a documentary named Gabo: La Magia de lo Real [2015] about the life and work of famed Colombian writer Gabriel García Marquéz. Ever having to choose, I chose to go with seeing the lovely / fascinating Cuban "indie" film Espejuelos Oscuros [2015], and then the current film (from Spain) which presents its story, in part, in the idiom of Flamenco dance.
The current film is adapted from a stage production with the same name and about the same theme. Yet as a top quality screen adaptation, the film takes advantage of the possibilities offered offered by film medium as opposed to simply the stage. Thus the film weaved together three types of presentation:
There are stage-acted vignettes that set-up the the stories of Celia (played / danced by Raquel Gómez and voiced by Amparo Climent) and Consuelo (played / danced by Paloma Gómez and voiced by Luisa Gavaza) two women abused by men in their lives.
There are the danced emotional responses of these two women to the situations that they find themselves in.
Finally, interspersed in the film are testimonies of various women who actually endured the kind of suffering / abuse portrayed in the story.
Further, the film makers took full advantage of the possibilities offered by presenting the story by means of a camera: Thus Viewers are offered visual (point of view) perspectives on the story as it plays-out that would be simply impossible to offer to Viewers simply seated in a theater watching a stage production.
North American Readers here with some experience of watching some of the "Met-Live" productions offered by FathomEvents.com would understand some of the benefits (closeup / alternative POVs + interview possibilities) offered to Viewers watching a staged event in this, a screen form. Further, as opposed to a "Met-Live" video production, the film here is a well crafted, definitive, indeed "canonical" product. Hence it has also taken advantage of the possibilities of multiple takes / editing.
The lovers of Stage productions will, of course, find some sadness in that -- the Spontaneity _inherently present_ on the Stage has passed through and been largely Removed (except where it has been Approved) by a Censor (er ... "Editor" ;-). Yet a film print of such a Production becomes that Production's "Final" or "Best / Canonical" product. And a film offers advantages (some enumerated above) over those possible on Stage.
So this is a very interesting and thought-provoking production about a theme -- domestic violence -- that itself produces much to think about / discuss as well.
As such it is a truly stellar quality product and I do hope it becomes available on DVD or various streaming platforms (vimeo, iTunes, Netflix, Amazon Instant Video) soon enough.
Excellent job!
* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser.
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If
you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6
_non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To
donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >
Reviews of current films written by Fr. Dennis Zdenek Kriz, OSM of St. Philip Benizi Parish, Fullerton, CA
Thursday, April 21, 2016
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
Dad (orig. ¡Pa! ¡Por mis hijos lo que sea!) [2015]
MPAA (UR would be PG) Fr. Dennis (3 1/4 Stars)
IMDb listing
FilmAffinity/es listing*
BluRadio.com radio interview w. director*
Vangardia.cine article about director*
WRadio.com.co review*
Zeleb.com.co review*
Dad (orig. ¡Pa! ¡Por mis hijos lo que sea!) [2015] [IMDb] [FAes]* (written and directed by Harold Trompetero [IMDb] [FAes]*) is a very funny and very sweet FAMILY DRAMEDY from COLOMBIA that played recently at the 32nd (2016) Chicago Latino Film Festival.
Viewers will find it in a similar bittersweet vein as Roberto Begnini's Life is Beautiful (orig. La vita è bella) [1997] and Eugenio Derbez' more recent Instructions Not Included (orig. No se Aceptan Devoluciones) [2013].
The film's about Enrique (played by Júlio César Herrera [IMDb] [FAEs]*) initially some sort of a big-shot manager for some sort of a Colombian bank or enterprise. At the beginning of the film, he's told by his boss that he's being promoted to lead the enterprise's office in Lima, Peru. Just a few formalities needed to be completed -- some paper work, a medical exam -- and then he'd be set.
Well, Enrique comes home beaming to his wife Luz (played by Nöelle Shönwald [IMDb] [FAEs]*) and his teenage daughter (played by Grace David [IMDb] [FAEs]*) and slightly younger son (played by Juan Sebastian Parada [IMDb] [FAEs]*) and they're, of course, very excited. The daughter in particularly with all the certainly of a 14-15 year old exclaims "Dad, and we're going to have to get completely new [iphones, etc] because you know PERU is at the _leading edge_ of the tech world in Latin America" (Nice try daughter, trying to get me to buy you a new iPhone ;-).
All this excitement comes to a screeching halt when the medical test comes back, and the boss tells him, "I'm sorry Enrique, but with a medical test like this we can't send you to Lima." (What does the test say, it's unclear). Things get even worse when the boss informs him that _unfortunately_ they had already hired someone to replace him, SO ... not only does Enrique NOT get the promotion to Lima, but effectively HE'S LOST HIS JOB.
SO ... Enrique has to go home and tell the family that not only are they not going to Lima but now he's unemployed and ... at minimum his age it's not necessarily gonna be easy to find another job.
Much of the rest of the film is about Enrique coming-up with increasingly desperate ways to bring home some money, AND ALSO the family progressively adapting / chipping-in to try to make the situation better.
Notably the Colombian "valley girl" of a daughter who initially (and mindlessly) looked-down upon the young people her age working at the mall, "rolling her eyes" and so forth when they got something wrong ... now GETS A JOB AT THE SAME MALL (and finds herself putting-up with similar "eye rolling" customers ;-) BUT SHE DOES THIS HAPPILY FOR THE SAKE OF THE FAMILY ... that is, SHE'S GROWN UP A BIT in the process ;-)
Luz, Enrique's wife becomes a real supportive trooper as well.
Of course, there's a reveal that has to occur, which I'm not going to reveal here. But I do want to say that THIS WAS A REALLY NICE MOVIE. Yes, the family was rich (certainly initially) richer than the vast majority of Colombians (or even North Americans) BUT IT WAS ALSO A FAMILY THAT REALLY SUPPORTED EACH OTHER WHEN TIMES GOT TOUGH.
It was just a really nice film and one that reminds Viewers of the place of Family in Latino Culture. Rich or poor, everybody chips-in in times of need.
In that regard this is an excellent film, which turns out to be an homage that the writer / director Harold Trompetero [IMDb] [FAes]* was making TO HIS OWN DAD who went through many of the difficulties described in the film.
Good job! Very good job!
* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser.
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >>
IMDb listing
FilmAffinity/es listing*
BluRadio.com radio interview w. director*
Vangardia.cine article about director*
WRadio.com.co review*
Zeleb.com.co review*
Dad (orig. ¡Pa! ¡Por mis hijos lo que sea!) [2015] [IMDb] [FAes]* (written and directed by Harold Trompetero [IMDb] [FAes]*) is a very funny and very sweet FAMILY DRAMEDY from COLOMBIA that played recently at the 32nd (2016) Chicago Latino Film Festival.
Viewers will find it in a similar bittersweet vein as Roberto Begnini's Life is Beautiful (orig. La vita è bella) [1997] and Eugenio Derbez' more recent Instructions Not Included (orig. No se Aceptan Devoluciones) [2013].
The film's about Enrique (played by Júlio César Herrera [IMDb] [FAEs]*) initially some sort of a big-shot manager for some sort of a Colombian bank or enterprise. At the beginning of the film, he's told by his boss that he's being promoted to lead the enterprise's office in Lima, Peru. Just a few formalities needed to be completed -- some paper work, a medical exam -- and then he'd be set.
Well, Enrique comes home beaming to his wife Luz (played by Nöelle Shönwald [IMDb] [FAEs]*) and his teenage daughter (played by Grace David [IMDb] [FAEs]*) and slightly younger son (played by Juan Sebastian Parada [IMDb] [FAEs]*) and they're, of course, very excited. The daughter in particularly with all the certainly of a 14-15 year old exclaims "Dad, and we're going to have to get completely new [iphones, etc] because you know PERU is at the _leading edge_ of the tech world in Latin America" (Nice try daughter, trying to get me to buy you a new iPhone ;-).
All this excitement comes to a screeching halt when the medical test comes back, and the boss tells him, "I'm sorry Enrique, but with a medical test like this we can't send you to Lima." (What does the test say, it's unclear). Things get even worse when the boss informs him that _unfortunately_ they had already hired someone to replace him, SO ... not only does Enrique NOT get the promotion to Lima, but effectively HE'S LOST HIS JOB.
SO ... Enrique has to go home and tell the family that not only are they not going to Lima but now he's unemployed and ... at minimum his age it's not necessarily gonna be easy to find another job.
Much of the rest of the film is about Enrique coming-up with increasingly desperate ways to bring home some money, AND ALSO the family progressively adapting / chipping-in to try to make the situation better.
Notably the Colombian "valley girl" of a daughter who initially (and mindlessly) looked-down upon the young people her age working at the mall, "rolling her eyes" and so forth when they got something wrong ... now GETS A JOB AT THE SAME MALL (and finds herself putting-up with similar "eye rolling" customers ;-) BUT SHE DOES THIS HAPPILY FOR THE SAKE OF THE FAMILY ... that is, SHE'S GROWN UP A BIT in the process ;-)
Luz, Enrique's wife becomes a real supportive trooper as well.
Of course, there's a reveal that has to occur, which I'm not going to reveal here. But I do want to say that THIS WAS A REALLY NICE MOVIE. Yes, the family was rich (certainly initially) richer than the vast majority of Colombians (or even North Americans) BUT IT WAS ALSO A FAMILY THAT REALLY SUPPORTED EACH OTHER WHEN TIMES GOT TOUGH.
It was just a really nice film and one that reminds Viewers of the place of Family in Latino Culture. Rich or poor, everybody chips-in in times of need.
In that regard this is an excellent film, which turns out to be an homage that the writer / director Harold Trompetero [IMDb] [FAes]* was making TO HIS OWN DAD who went through many of the difficulties described in the film.
Good job! Very good job!
* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser.
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >>
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Dark Glasses (orig. Espejuelos Oscuros) [2015]
MPAA (UR would be R) Fr. Dennis (4+ Stars)
IMDb listing
AdoroCinema listing*
PeliCuba listing*
Diario de las Americas (L. Lionel León) article*
Miami Herald (R. Rodriguez) article
Cocalecas.net (R. Piralta Riguad) interview w. director*
CubaCine.cu (A. Martín Pastrana) interview w. director*
NewTimes-Miami (N. Martinez) interview w. director
OnCuba.com interview w. director
ACN.cu (M. Hernández Martínez) review*
NewTimes- Miami (A. Martinez) review
Dark Glasses (orig. Espejuelos Oscuros) [2015] [AC]* (written and directed by Jessica Rodríguez [IMDb] [AC]*) is ANOTHER TRULY REMARKABLE FILM -- here a CUBAN (and SPANISH) "small indie" film (a characterization which when talking about a place like CUBA immediately takes on a VERY INTERESTING SIGNIFICANCE) -- that played recently at the 32nd (2016) Chicago Latino Film Festival after making stirs at both the Havana International Festival for New Latin American Cinema in Dec. 2015 where it played for three round-the-block sellout audiences (despite it being generally considered doubtful that it'll receive a license for general theatrical release in Cuba anytime soon...) and then at the Miami International Film Festival in March 2016.
Indeed, the film crosses all kinds of boundaries: The Cuban-born but now Spain-residing writer-director Jessica Rodríguez [IMDb] [AC]* who got her initial degree in film-making in Cuba but has since studied in Spain and even in the United States, using Spanish crowd-sourced money, nonetheless filmed this movie in Cuba utilizing the services of two very well known Cuban actors -- Laura de la Uz [IMDb] [FAes]* and José Alberto García [IMDb] [FAes]*. Further, her script, which she penned while still a student in Cuba, leans on both the story of Scheherazade [wikip] of a 1001 Nights [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] and the classic Cuban Communist Era film Lucia [1968] the latter which she arguably subverts. Again, this is one heck of a film ;-).
So then, to the movie itself:
It tells the story of Esperanza (played by Laura de la Uz [IMDb] [FAes]*) who finds herself in a terrible situation. An escaped criminal named Mario (played by José Alberto García [IMDb] [FAes]*) had broken into her home in the Cuban hinterlands to hide from police and has made it clear that he plans to rape her before making his next move.
Playing for time, Esperanza asks Mario to read to her ... three stories (from different periods in Cuban history) all interestingly involving both rather steamy situations (which interest Mario) and female empowerment or at least putting powerful men in their place (which is why Esperanza had collected them).
Now why would Esperanza get Mario to do this? Well ... Mario quickly comes to feel sorry for Esperanza because she appears to be almost blind. He may be a desperate man, but he's not completely Evil, even though, of course, he really wants to rape her, but then not necessarily "beat her over the head and take her" (he'd like her to at least partly want him). Anyway, she tells him that she loves hearing these stories (and since she's blind, she can't read them herself). AND she promises him that they're steamy enough that HE'D enjoy them too.
So ... Mario decides to "read her a story or two ..." ultimately three, and, well, they're compelling stories:
One's set in the 1970s (during the height of the Communist Era) involving a hot "hooker" / "seemingly Communist informer" Marlene who eventually gets her revenge (quite amusingly) on her lecherous Communist Party-member boss. (This is why I personally don't think that this film will play anytime soon in regular Cuban theaters ... or if it does, then honestly Cuba will have changed quite a bit ...).
The second is set during late 1950s just before the fall of the Battista regime in which a Battista police officer tortures young Cuban (left-wing) student who's in love with the same woman as he. However, by the time the police officer is done with the student, he's probably revealed more about himself than he'd like ...
Finally, the last story is set during the 1890 Cuban War for Independence and again a Cuban revolutionary (or perhaps loyalist it's not necessarily clear) is outsmarted by a Cuban woman (who incidently, like Esperanza, lives alone out in the Cuban countryside) who turns out to be able to keep her loyalties closer to the vest than he.
And by the end of the third story Esperanza, in fact, is able to find a way to outwit Mario as well. (I'm not going to say how ...)
Readers here who know something of Scheherazade [wikip] of a 1001 Nights [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] and then the signature Communist Era film Lucia [1968] will see the obvious similarities / references to both.
Anyway, it makes for one heck of a film and it'll be very interesting to see if the film does find its way to play not merely at a rarified Havana Film Festival but out in the Provinces to general Cuban audiences as well.
Great job!
* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser.
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >>
IMDb listing
AdoroCinema listing*
PeliCuba listing*
Diario de las Americas (L. Lionel León) article*
Miami Herald (R. Rodriguez) article
Cocalecas.net (R. Piralta Riguad) interview w. director*
CubaCine.cu (A. Martín Pastrana) interview w. director*
NewTimes-Miami (N. Martinez) interview w. director
OnCuba.com interview w. director
ACN.cu (M. Hernández Martínez) review*
NewTimes- Miami (A. Martinez) review
Dark Glasses (orig. Espejuelos Oscuros) [2015] [AC]* (written and directed by Jessica Rodríguez [IMDb] [AC]*) is ANOTHER TRULY REMARKABLE FILM -- here a CUBAN (and SPANISH) "small indie" film (a characterization which when talking about a place like CUBA immediately takes on a VERY INTERESTING SIGNIFICANCE) -- that played recently at the 32nd (2016) Chicago Latino Film Festival after making stirs at both the Havana International Festival for New Latin American Cinema in Dec. 2015 where it played for three round-the-block sellout audiences (despite it being generally considered doubtful that it'll receive a license for general theatrical release in Cuba anytime soon...) and then at the Miami International Film Festival in March 2016.
Indeed, the film crosses all kinds of boundaries: The Cuban-born but now Spain-residing writer-director Jessica Rodríguez [IMDb] [AC]* who got her initial degree in film-making in Cuba but has since studied in Spain and even in the United States, using Spanish crowd-sourced money, nonetheless filmed this movie in Cuba utilizing the services of two very well known Cuban actors -- Laura de la Uz [IMDb] [FAes]* and José Alberto García [IMDb] [FAes]*. Further, her script, which she penned while still a student in Cuba, leans on both the story of Scheherazade [wikip] of a 1001 Nights [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] and the classic Cuban Communist Era film Lucia [1968] the latter which she arguably subverts. Again, this is one heck of a film ;-).
So then, to the movie itself:
It tells the story of Esperanza (played by Laura de la Uz [IMDb] [FAes]*) who finds herself in a terrible situation. An escaped criminal named Mario (played by José Alberto García [IMDb] [FAes]*) had broken into her home in the Cuban hinterlands to hide from police and has made it clear that he plans to rape her before making his next move.
Playing for time, Esperanza asks Mario to read to her ... three stories (from different periods in Cuban history) all interestingly involving both rather steamy situations (which interest Mario) and female empowerment or at least putting powerful men in their place (which is why Esperanza had collected them).
Now why would Esperanza get Mario to do this? Well ... Mario quickly comes to feel sorry for Esperanza because she appears to be almost blind. He may be a desperate man, but he's not completely Evil, even though, of course, he really wants to rape her, but then not necessarily "beat her over the head and take her" (he'd like her to at least partly want him). Anyway, she tells him that she loves hearing these stories (and since she's blind, she can't read them herself). AND she promises him that they're steamy enough that HE'D enjoy them too.
So ... Mario decides to "read her a story or two ..." ultimately three, and, well, they're compelling stories:
One's set in the 1970s (during the height of the Communist Era) involving a hot "hooker" / "seemingly Communist informer" Marlene who eventually gets her revenge (quite amusingly) on her lecherous Communist Party-member boss. (This is why I personally don't think that this film will play anytime soon in regular Cuban theaters ... or if it does, then honestly Cuba will have changed quite a bit ...).
The second is set during late 1950s just before the fall of the Battista regime in which a Battista police officer tortures young Cuban (left-wing) student who's in love with the same woman as he. However, by the time the police officer is done with the student, he's probably revealed more about himself than he'd like ...
Finally, the last story is set during the 1890 Cuban War for Independence and again a Cuban revolutionary (or perhaps loyalist it's not necessarily clear) is outsmarted by a Cuban woman (who incidently, like Esperanza, lives alone out in the Cuban countryside) who turns out to be able to keep her loyalties closer to the vest than he.
And by the end of the third story Esperanza, in fact, is able to find a way to outwit Mario as well. (I'm not going to say how ...)
Readers here who know something of Scheherazade [wikip] of a 1001 Nights [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] and then the signature Communist Era film Lucia [1968] will see the obvious similarities / references to both.
Anyway, it makes for one heck of a film and it'll be very interesting to see if the film does find its way to play not merely at a rarified Havana Film Festival but out in the Provinces to general Cuban audiences as well.
Great job!
* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser.
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >>
The Moving Forest (orig. A Floresta que se Move) [2016]
MPAA (UR would be PG-13) Fr. Dennis (3 1/2 Stars)
IMDb listing
AdoroCinema listing*
Criticos.com.br (L.F. Gallego) review*
A Folha do São Paulo (C. Starling Carlos) review*
O Globo (S. Schild) review*
The Moving Forest (orig. A Floresta que se Move) [2016] [IMDb] [AC]* (directed and cowritten by Vinicius Coimbra [IMDb] [AC]* along with Manuela Dias [IMDb] [AC]*) is a CONTEMPORARY BRAZILIAN (URUGUAYAN SET) DRAMA based on the Shakesperean play Macbeth and was made in honor of the recent 400th Anniversary of Shakespeare's birth. The film played recently at the 32nd (2016) Chicago Latino Film Festival.
Elias (played by Gabriel Braga Nunes [IMDb] [AC]*) and César (played by Ângelo Antônio [IMDb] [AC]*) come home from a distant business trip. At the airport they run into a strange "knitting lady" who greets Elias as the "Vice President" of his Bank. Taken aback (he does not know her, and she's wrong) he corrects her that he's but a Financial Officer of the his Bank. She repeats that today he's the "Vice President" and that tomorrow he could be "President" of the Bank.
The two arrive at their Bank's Headquarters and the Bank's President Heitor (played by Nelson Xavier [IMDb] [AC]*) tells them that indeed both of them are being promoted. The previous VP had been forced to resign because of scandal, Elias is to take the VP's job and César, Elias'. Elias is both surprised and impressed, that old woman had been right.
He comes home and tells his beautiful wife Clara (played by Ana Paula Arósio [IMDb] [AC]*) the news, that he's become Vice President at the Bank and that he's invited Heitor over to dinner at their stunning, modern, if certainly "cold" stone-steel-and-glass mansion at the outskirts of the city. On hearing this, all that Clara can think of is how to knock-off Heitor when he comes over, telling Elias "a chance like this WON'T come again."
Elias initially discounts Clara's suggestions. Yet, as with ... ambition starts to get the better of him. Clara's right, there won't another chance like this ever again, and that strange old knitter was right as well. He COULD become President (of the bank) "in a day."
The rest of the story ensues ... ;-)
I did find the film to be a very good adaptation. I also have to say that Elias / Clara's citadel, sleek, modern but (air conditioned) COLD was a REMARKABLE re-imagination of an "Old Scottish Castle" even if it was located in a quite WARM WEATHER location like CONTEMPORARY BRAZIL / URUGUAY today ;-).
Anyway, I do think that MANY Shakespeare lovers would enjoy what the film makers did with the play here in this film.
Good, good job! ;-)
* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser.
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >
IMDb listing
AdoroCinema listing*
Criticos.com.br (L.F. Gallego) review*
A Folha do São Paulo (C. Starling Carlos) review*
O Globo (S. Schild) review*
The Moving Forest (orig. A Floresta que se Move) [2016] [IMDb] [AC]* (directed and cowritten by Vinicius Coimbra [IMDb] [AC]* along with Manuela Dias [IMDb] [AC]*) is a CONTEMPORARY BRAZILIAN (URUGUAYAN SET) DRAMA based on the Shakesperean play Macbeth and was made in honor of the recent 400th Anniversary of Shakespeare's birth. The film played recently at the 32nd (2016) Chicago Latino Film Festival.
Elias (played by Gabriel Braga Nunes [IMDb] [AC]*) and César (played by Ângelo Antônio [IMDb] [AC]*) come home from a distant business trip. At the airport they run into a strange "knitting lady" who greets Elias as the "Vice President" of his Bank. Taken aback (he does not know her, and she's wrong) he corrects her that he's but a Financial Officer of the his Bank. She repeats that today he's the "Vice President" and that tomorrow he could be "President" of the Bank.
The two arrive at their Bank's Headquarters and the Bank's President Heitor (played by Nelson Xavier [IMDb] [AC]*) tells them that indeed both of them are being promoted. The previous VP had been forced to resign because of scandal, Elias is to take the VP's job and César, Elias'. Elias is both surprised and impressed, that old woman had been right.
He comes home and tells his beautiful wife Clara (played by Ana Paula Arósio [IMDb] [AC]*) the news, that he's become Vice President at the Bank and that he's invited Heitor over to dinner at their stunning, modern, if certainly "cold" stone-steel-and-glass mansion at the outskirts of the city. On hearing this, all that Clara can think of is how to knock-off Heitor when he comes over, telling Elias "a chance like this WON'T come again."
Elias initially discounts Clara's suggestions. Yet, as with ... ambition starts to get the better of him. Clara's right, there won't another chance like this ever again, and that strange old knitter was right as well. He COULD become President (of the bank) "in a day."
The rest of the story ensues ... ;-)
I did find the film to be a very good adaptation. I also have to say that Elias / Clara's citadel, sleek, modern but (air conditioned) COLD was a REMARKABLE re-imagination of an "Old Scottish Castle" even if it was located in a quite WARM WEATHER location like CONTEMPORARY BRAZIL / URUGUAY today ;-).
Anyway, I do think that MANY Shakespeare lovers would enjoy what the film makers did with the play here in this film.
Good, good job! ;-)
* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser.
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >
The Greatest House in the World (orig. La Casa más Grande del Mundo [2015]
MPAA (UR would be PG) Fr. Dennis (4+ Stars)
IMDb listing
FilmAffinity.com/es listing*
Celuloide Digital (F. Flynn) review*
Konexion.com.mx (R. Rosales Santos) review*
PrensaLibre.com (AP) review*
Revés.com (A.C. Guzmán) review*
ViveIberoAmerica.com (J.F. Caballero) review*
The Hollywood Reporter (J. Mintzner) review
The Greatest House in the World (orig. La Casa más Grande del Mundo [2015[ [IMDb] [FAes]* (codirected by Ana V. Bojorquez [IMDb] [FAes]* and Lucía Carreras [IMDb] [FAes]*, screenplay cowritten by Ana V. Bojorquez [IMDb] and Edgar Sajcabún [IMDb], story by Edgar Sajcabún [IMDb]) a small "indie" GUATEMALAN / MEXICAN COPRODUCTION, is among this year's Chicago Latino Film Festival's offerings ONE BEST / MOST EMOTIONALLY COMPELLING FILMS that I've seen since beginning my blog
The film tells the very simple story of a ten year old girl named Rocio (played magnificently by "a local" Gloria López [IMDb] [FAes]) growing-up with her mother (played by Mexican actress Miriam Bravo [IMDb] [FAes]*) and grandmother (played by "local" Fabiana Ortiz [IMDb] [FAes]*) out in the cragy and often mist covered hinterlands of N.W. (Huehuetenango / ) Guatemala close to the border of Mexico.
Neither Rocío's father nor _any_ other males of working age appear in the entire film, even though, Rocio's mother was very much pregnant in the story. Why weren't there any young / middle age males in the story, I asked the director present for Q/A at the end of the screening, believing sincerely (and not necessarily unsympathetically) that there probably a feminist statement being made there. Instead, the director quite sincerely responded that this is a part of Guatemala where almost all the working-age males _go up north_ (to Mexico and beyond to the United States) in hopes _to find better work_ to support the families that they leave behind at home.
So ... Rocio, who up to this point has been going-out with her mother each morning, herding the family's 15-20 or so sheep, playing with rocks on the (rocky...) pastures pretending that she's gonna build "the grandest house in the world" up there with those rocks ... comes to a day when, ma' is simply too close to delivery to go out with the sheep anymore. And so ma' and grandma entrust Rocio to take the sheep out that day; ROCIO's "growing up" ;-)
'Cept, PUT YOURSELVES IN ROCIO'S SHOES ... this proves to be a pretty awesome responsibility. Those 15-20 rather stubborn, not particularly bright sheep (and they have no dog to keep them together) represent a fair amount of this family's wealth (sheep aren't called LIVE STOCK for nothing). And so poor Rocio who soon runs into a friend named Ixchumil (played by "local" but unrelated María López [IMDb] [FAes]*) perhaps a year or two older also tending her family's 15-20 sheep, and then a little boy their age (played by "local" Elder Escobedo [IMDb] [FAes]*) with a sling-shot and after being little kids out in the field, alone, playing, acting like regular 10-12 year olds, Rocio finds to her horror that she's "lost lone of her sheep," the littlest one in fact.
What to do? She has to look for it. Ixchumil and the little boy help her out for a bit, but then Ixchumil as only a 12 y.o. could say, tells Rocio that SHE has to go home with HER sheep or else SHE will get into trouble with HER family. Sho Rocio's soon "out there, all alone" with her remaining 14-19 sheep looking for "the lost sheep."
She comes to the hut of an old man (played wonderfully, if not particularly helpfully it turns out by "local" Daniel Ramirez [IMDb] [FAes]*) who tells her that he _may_ have heard a sheep bleeting by a nearby ravine. Rocio runs there and finds her lost sheep, but when she gets back to the old man's hut, her other sheep are now gone. What happened? Well, the old man is not Evil, just not particularly useful / reliable (anymore) ... the sheep just seemed to run away.
Sigh ... PUT YOURSELVES AGAIN IN 10 Y/O ROCIO'S SHOES ... this is the first day that Rocio was out with the family's sheep and ... SHE'S LOST MOST OF THEM.
You just want to cry ...
I asked the director about obvious Biblical allusions (this past Sunday, was, in fact "Good Shepherd Sunday" - 4th Sunday of Easter) as well as a possible influence of a WONDERFUL CLASSIC ITALIAN FILM, Vittorio DiSeca's Bicycle Thieves (Ladri di Biciclette) [1948], and the director responded that certainly I was not the first to ask about the possible Biblical allusions, or about other films that touched on similar quite universal themes. However, she said that she and her collaborators, who incidentally studied in Cuba, were _most inspired_ by Iranian cinema, and specifically a famous Iranian, similarly minimalist (and Oscar Nominated) film named Children of Heaven [1997] which was also about children, responsibility and the facing of frightful / unfairly significant loss.
Anyway, this is one heck of a film ... and as a MINOR (but IMHO _necessary_) SPOILER I just want to assure Readers here that when Rocio comes home after a clearly VERY ROUGH "FIRST DAY" ... the story DOESN'T END in an altogether sad way. After all, she's coming home ... to family.
Again, wow, what a story! And I do hope that after it completes its festival rounds, this film will happily become available on DVD / for streaming. It's well worth the cry and the view.
* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser.
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >>
IMDb listing
FilmAffinity.com/es listing*
Celuloide Digital (F. Flynn) review*
Konexion.com.mx (R. Rosales Santos) review*
PrensaLibre.com (AP) review*
Revés.com (A.C. Guzmán) review*
ViveIberoAmerica.com (J.F. Caballero) review*
The Hollywood Reporter (J. Mintzner) review
The Greatest House in the World (orig. La Casa más Grande del Mundo [2015[ [IMDb] [FAes]* (codirected by Ana V. Bojorquez [IMDb] [FAes]* and Lucía Carreras [IMDb] [FAes]*, screenplay cowritten by Ana V. Bojorquez [IMDb] and Edgar Sajcabún [IMDb], story by Edgar Sajcabún [IMDb]) a small "indie" GUATEMALAN / MEXICAN COPRODUCTION, is among this year's Chicago Latino Film Festival's offerings ONE BEST / MOST EMOTIONALLY COMPELLING FILMS that I've seen since beginning my blog
The film tells the very simple story of a ten year old girl named Rocio (played magnificently by "a local" Gloria López [IMDb] [FAes]) growing-up with her mother (played by Mexican actress Miriam Bravo [IMDb] [FAes]*) and grandmother (played by "local" Fabiana Ortiz [IMDb] [FAes]*) out in the cragy and often mist covered hinterlands of N.W. (Huehuetenango / ) Guatemala close to the border of Mexico.
Neither Rocío's father nor _any_ other males of working age appear in the entire film, even though, Rocio's mother was very much pregnant in the story. Why weren't there any young / middle age males in the story, I asked the director present for Q/A at the end of the screening, believing sincerely (and not necessarily unsympathetically) that there probably a feminist statement being made there. Instead, the director quite sincerely responded that this is a part of Guatemala where almost all the working-age males _go up north_ (to Mexico and beyond to the United States) in hopes _to find better work_ to support the families that they leave behind at home.
So ... Rocio, who up to this point has been going-out with her mother each morning, herding the family's 15-20 or so sheep, playing with rocks on the (rocky...) pastures pretending that she's gonna build "the grandest house in the world" up there with those rocks ... comes to a day when, ma' is simply too close to delivery to go out with the sheep anymore. And so ma' and grandma entrust Rocio to take the sheep out that day; ROCIO's "growing up" ;-)
'Cept, PUT YOURSELVES IN ROCIO'S SHOES ... this proves to be a pretty awesome responsibility. Those 15-20 rather stubborn, not particularly bright sheep (and they have no dog to keep them together) represent a fair amount of this family's wealth (sheep aren't called LIVE STOCK for nothing). And so poor Rocio who soon runs into a friend named Ixchumil (played by "local" but unrelated María López [IMDb] [FAes]*) perhaps a year or two older also tending her family's 15-20 sheep, and then a little boy their age (played by "local" Elder Escobedo [IMDb] [FAes]*) with a sling-shot and after being little kids out in the field, alone, playing, acting like regular 10-12 year olds, Rocio finds to her horror that she's "lost lone of her sheep," the littlest one in fact.
What to do? She has to look for it. Ixchumil and the little boy help her out for a bit, but then Ixchumil as only a 12 y.o. could say, tells Rocio that SHE has to go home with HER sheep or else SHE will get into trouble with HER family. Sho Rocio's soon "out there, all alone" with her remaining 14-19 sheep looking for "the lost sheep."
She comes to the hut of an old man (played wonderfully, if not particularly helpfully it turns out by "local" Daniel Ramirez [IMDb] [FAes]*) who tells her that he _may_ have heard a sheep bleeting by a nearby ravine. Rocio runs there and finds her lost sheep, but when she gets back to the old man's hut, her other sheep are now gone. What happened? Well, the old man is not Evil, just not particularly useful / reliable (anymore) ... the sheep just seemed to run away.
Sigh ... PUT YOURSELVES AGAIN IN 10 Y/O ROCIO'S SHOES ... this is the first day that Rocio was out with the family's sheep and ... SHE'S LOST MOST OF THEM.
You just want to cry ...
I asked the director about obvious Biblical allusions (this past Sunday, was, in fact "Good Shepherd Sunday" - 4th Sunday of Easter) as well as a possible influence of a WONDERFUL CLASSIC ITALIAN FILM, Vittorio DiSeca's Bicycle Thieves (Ladri di Biciclette) [1948], and the director responded that certainly I was not the first to ask about the possible Biblical allusions, or about other films that touched on similar quite universal themes. However, she said that she and her collaborators, who incidentally studied in Cuba, were _most inspired_ by Iranian cinema, and specifically a famous Iranian, similarly minimalist (and Oscar Nominated) film named Children of Heaven [1997] which was also about children, responsibility and the facing of frightful / unfairly significant loss.
Anyway, this is one heck of a film ... and as a MINOR (but IMHO _necessary_) SPOILER I just want to assure Readers here that when Rocio comes home after a clearly VERY ROUGH "FIRST DAY" ... the story DOESN'T END in an altogether sad way. After all, she's coming home ... to family.
Again, wow, what a story! And I do hope that after it completes its festival rounds, this film will happily become available on DVD / for streaming. It's well worth the cry and the view.
* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser.
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >>
Monday, April 18, 2016
The Jungle Book [2016]
MPAA (PG) CNS/USCCB (A-II) ChicagoTribune (3 Stars) RE.com (4 Stars) AVClub (B-) Fr. Dennis (3 1/2 Stars)
IMDb listing
CNS/USCCB (J. McAleer) review
ChicagoTribune (M. Phillips) review
RogerEbert.com (M. Zoller Seitz) review
AVClub (I. Vishnevetsky) review
The Jungle Book [2016] (directed by Jon Favreau, screenplay by Justin Marks, based on the classic children's book [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] [IMDb] by Rudyard Kipling [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] [IMDb]) is a remarkable testament to the potential of our times. What else could one say about a hyper-REALISTIC ... children's tale complete with talking, indeed SINGING bears (thanks Bill Murray ;-) that look like the ones one'd run into in Yellowstone.
Yes, I can immediately imagine how technology could soon disemploy all future generations of actors, doomed soon to compete against Studio-OWNED eternal CGI hyper-realistic "clip art" versions of Brad Pitt, Scarlett Johansson, or even an army of Computer-Enhanced Kumars (er Kal Penns) or Woody Allens ;-). But that's for another more dystopic SciFi-ish film to explore (Attn: film-makers, I'd want some credit and my Order could certainly use the royalties ;-) For now, let's just bask in THE AWESOMENESS of watching Bill Murray voicing a good-natured (if somewhat morally lacking ;-) SINGING CGI bear who looked like he _could_ have been just as ferocious (if he tried ... ;-) as the CGI bear that nearly tore-to-pieces Leonardo DiCaprio's character in The Revenant [2015]. Again, what a remarkable time we live in!
The story? Oh, yes, the story ... ;-). It follows the basic outline of the story of Mowgli [wikip] [IMDb] (played here by Neel Sethi) from Kipling's original Jungle Book [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] with obvious influences from the Disney's 1967 animated version as well as The Lion King [1994].
Mowgli [wikip] [IMDb] was a human baby that was left abandoned and defenseless in the Indian jungle of the British Raj Era after his parents were killed by a tiger Shere Khan [wikip] [IMDb] (voiced in the current version by Idris Elba). Saved by a panther named Bagheera [wikip] [IMDb] (voiced here by Ben Kingsley) and given-over by said panther to a pack of wolves led by Akela [wikip] [IMDb] (voiced by Giancarlo Esposito) and Raksha [wikip] [IMDb] (voiced here by Lupita Nyong'o) for raising.
The film begins with 10 y/o Mowgli happily running about the jungle with his follow wolf-step-brothers nobody caring (much) that he was "a bit different" than the other wolf cubs, 'cept when Mowgli occasionally just does one of his "human tricks" (spontaneously using _some item_ like a shell or a stick as a tool). At those times he's told quite forthrightly that his behavior (human trick) was "inappropriate" for "life (among animals) in the jungle" ;-).
All seems to be going well until ... Shere Khan the tiger reenters (after a many year absence) Mowgli's life, wanting to kill him, and Bagheera then to wolf-mother Raksha's dismay tells Mowgli that they're going to have to get him to a human village so that he could be safe (from said tiger).
Much then ensues ... including Mowgli's much above mentioned encounter (followed by somewhat complicated friendship) with Baloo the Bear [wikip] [IMDb] (voiced with splendid ever slothful "this is soo much work" disconcern by Bill Murray ;-), as well as a temptress snake named Kaa [wikip] [IMDb] (and voiced wonderfully by Scarlet Johannson) and a true "800 pound of a Mobster gorilla (er orangutan)" King Louie (from Disney's 1967 adaptation) [IMDb] (voiced by Christopher Walken).
It all makes for one heck of a story ;-)
Great job folks! Great job!
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >>
IMDb listing
CNS/USCCB (J. McAleer) review
ChicagoTribune (M. Phillips) review
RogerEbert.com (M. Zoller Seitz) review
AVClub (I. Vishnevetsky) review
The Jungle Book [2016] (directed by Jon Favreau, screenplay by Justin Marks, based on the classic children's book [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] [IMDb] by Rudyard Kipling [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] [IMDb]) is a remarkable testament to the potential of our times. What else could one say about a hyper-REALISTIC ... children's tale complete with talking, indeed SINGING bears (thanks Bill Murray ;-) that look like the ones one'd run into in Yellowstone.
Yes, I can immediately imagine how technology could soon disemploy all future generations of actors, doomed soon to compete against Studio-OWNED eternal CGI hyper-realistic "clip art" versions of Brad Pitt, Scarlett Johansson, or even an army of Computer-Enhanced Kumars (er Kal Penns) or Woody Allens ;-). But that's for another more dystopic SciFi-ish film to explore (Attn: film-makers, I'd want some credit and my Order could certainly use the royalties ;-) For now, let's just bask in THE AWESOMENESS of watching Bill Murray voicing a good-natured (if somewhat morally lacking ;-) SINGING CGI bear who looked like he _could_ have been just as ferocious (if he tried ... ;-) as the CGI bear that nearly tore-to-pieces Leonardo DiCaprio's character in The Revenant [2015]. Again, what a remarkable time we live in!
The story? Oh, yes, the story ... ;-). It follows the basic outline of the story of Mowgli [wikip] [IMDb] (played here by Neel Sethi) from Kipling's original Jungle Book [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] with obvious influences from the Disney's 1967 animated version as well as The Lion King [1994].
Mowgli [wikip] [IMDb] was a human baby that was left abandoned and defenseless in the Indian jungle of the British Raj Era after his parents were killed by a tiger Shere Khan [wikip] [IMDb] (voiced in the current version by Idris Elba). Saved by a panther named Bagheera [wikip] [IMDb] (voiced here by Ben Kingsley) and given-over by said panther to a pack of wolves led by Akela [wikip] [IMDb] (voiced by Giancarlo Esposito) and Raksha [wikip] [IMDb] (voiced here by Lupita Nyong'o) for raising.
The film begins with 10 y/o Mowgli happily running about the jungle with his follow wolf-step-brothers nobody caring (much) that he was "a bit different" than the other wolf cubs, 'cept when Mowgli occasionally just does one of his "human tricks" (spontaneously using _some item_ like a shell or a stick as a tool). At those times he's told quite forthrightly that his behavior (human trick) was "inappropriate" for "life (among animals) in the jungle" ;-).
All seems to be going well until ... Shere Khan the tiger reenters (after a many year absence) Mowgli's life, wanting to kill him, and Bagheera then to wolf-mother Raksha's dismay tells Mowgli that they're going to have to get him to a human village so that he could be safe (from said tiger).
Much then ensues ... including Mowgli's much above mentioned encounter (followed by somewhat complicated friendship) with Baloo the Bear [wikip] [IMDb] (voiced with splendid ever slothful "this is soo much work" disconcern by Bill Murray ;-), as well as a temptress snake named Kaa [wikip] [IMDb] (and voiced wonderfully by Scarlet Johannson) and a true "800 pound of a Mobster gorilla (er orangutan)" King Louie (from Disney's 1967 adaptation) [IMDb] (voiced by Christopher Walken).
It all makes for one heck of a story ;-)
Great job folks! Great job!
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >>
The Oak's Shadow (orig. La Sombra del Roble) 2015]
MPAA (UR would be PG-13) Fr. Dennis (3 1/2 Stars)
IMDb listing
FilmAffinity/es listing
CineChile.cl listing*
ElMostrador.cl (E. Morales Lastra) review
Revista del Séptimo Arte (I. Torrealba Ramírez) review
The Oak's Shadow (orig. La Sombra del Roble) 2015] [IMDb] [FAes]*[CChl]* (directed by Nicolás Saldivia [IMDb] [FAes]*[CChl]*, screenplay by Paloma Miranda [IMDb] [CChl]* and Michelle Redôn [IMDb] [CChl]*) is a very well written and well acted / crafted "small indie" FAMILY DRAMA from CHILE that played recently at the 32nd (2016) Chicago Latino Film Festival.
The film tells the story of a random middle class family living in Santiago, Chile today. Remarkable in this film is that the characters of all four of the family's members -- the 40-something father named Jorge (played by Daniel Candia [IMDb] [FAes] [CChl]), his university aged son Pascual (played by Vicente Almuna [IMDb] [FAes] [CChl] and 12-13 y.o. daughter Elisa (played by Francisca Poloni [IMDb] [FAes] [CChl]) as well as Jorge's 70-something y.o. father Roberto (played by Julio Jung [IMDb] [FAes] [CChl]), who by all accounts had been holding the family together emotionally since Jorge's wife - Pascual / Elisa's mother - died, some 5 years before) -- are well developed. As such, fascinatingly, it could be said that ALL FOUR OF THESE CHARACTERS are true "protagonists" (rather than merely "supporting characters") in the story.
What drives the family to "crisis" -- after 5 years of quiet deceptively quiet passage of time in which Pascual and Elisa were of course "growing-up" (and Jorge / Roberto were "growing older") -- was that Roberto comes to be diagnosed with and incipient Alzheimer's, and all those conversations that did not take place and internal family disappointments / difficulties that were never confronted, now begin to come home to roost.
This is a deceptively quiet yet quite emotional film that I do believe a lot of Viewers would be able to relate to. NO ONE is "evil" in this story, but, wow, can life be hard at times.
Again, a very, very well written / crafted tale.
* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser.
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >>
IMDb listing
FilmAffinity/es listing
CineChile.cl listing*
ElMostrador.cl (E. Morales Lastra) review
Revista del Séptimo Arte (I. Torrealba Ramírez) review
The Oak's Shadow (orig. La Sombra del Roble) 2015] [IMDb] [FAes]*[CChl]* (directed by Nicolás Saldivia [IMDb] [FAes]*[CChl]*, screenplay by Paloma Miranda [IMDb] [CChl]* and Michelle Redôn [IMDb] [CChl]*) is a very well written and well acted / crafted "small indie" FAMILY DRAMA from CHILE that played recently at the 32nd (2016) Chicago Latino Film Festival.
The film tells the story of a random middle class family living in Santiago, Chile today. Remarkable in this film is that the characters of all four of the family's members -- the 40-something father named Jorge (played by Daniel Candia [IMDb] [FAes] [CChl]), his university aged son Pascual (played by Vicente Almuna [IMDb] [FAes] [CChl] and 12-13 y.o. daughter Elisa (played by Francisca Poloni [IMDb] [FAes] [CChl]) as well as Jorge's 70-something y.o. father Roberto (played by Julio Jung [IMDb] [FAes] [CChl]), who by all accounts had been holding the family together emotionally since Jorge's wife - Pascual / Elisa's mother - died, some 5 years before) -- are well developed. As such, fascinatingly, it could be said that ALL FOUR OF THESE CHARACTERS are true "protagonists" (rather than merely "supporting characters") in the story.
What drives the family to "crisis" -- after 5 years of quiet deceptively quiet passage of time in which Pascual and Elisa were of course "growing-up" (and Jorge / Roberto were "growing older") -- was that Roberto comes to be diagnosed with and incipient Alzheimer's, and all those conversations that did not take place and internal family disappointments / difficulties that were never confronted, now begin to come home to roost.
This is a deceptively quiet yet quite emotional film that I do believe a lot of Viewers would be able to relate to. NO ONE is "evil" in this story, but, wow, can life be hard at times.
Again, a very, very well written / crafted tale.
* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser.
< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >>
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