Review 25th Annual San Diego Latino Film Festival [2018] - Pt 1 | loganbennett
Of the movies that currently performed at the twenty fifth Annual San Diego Latino Film Festival [2018], I become able to view and evaluate the subsequent:
Now why have I liked these films? And why did I like this film even better than the first?
Well, as I mentioned, these films are family comedies, and interestingly enough FOCUSED HERE PRIMARILY ON THE GRANDPARENTS. The films take place in the context of a Senior living community / nursing home operated, since the series takes place in Puerto Rico, by a local congregation of Catholic Religious Sisters. In the first film, the Religious Sisters were portrayed perhaps a bit too harshly / stereotypically. In the current film, their portrayal has been softened and even deepened significantly resulting in a much more recommendable film on my part.
Then, the initial relationship focused on in the series has been that between a grandfather named Rafael (and played wonderfully by Jacobo Morales) and his quite guapo/surfing but still learning his way through life grandson Carlos (played by Luis Omar O'Farrill). The value of grandparents is shown beautifully in this film. Then in the current film, many of the _other_ characters at the senior living community / nursing home are much more developed. What's presented in this film is a _lovely community of life_ present _even in_ "a senior living community / nursing home" AND ONE CAN NOT BUT APPLAUD THIS! Viewers may be reminded of the even then highly successful American-TV series The Golden Girls [1985-1992] but even in a more serious (yet FUN) / realistic way.
There will be some Catholic Viewers who may find problems with ONE (or possibly two) scenes in the film, both of which come near its end (and for this reason, I'm not giving this film a flat-out 4+ Star rating (yes, the film is THAT GOOD AND THAT SIMULTANEOUSLY POIGNANT / FUNNY). But as I wrote in reviews before, in a Free Country, Artists have the right to use their Art to express the opinions that they hold. We may not like them, and may respond accordingly, but they certainly have the right to express them. Further, GENERALLY SPEAKING (as is _certainly_ the case here), noting that many Catholics / Christians would have some problems with some of the film's resolutions, there is SO MUCH ELSE THAT IS EXCELLENT IN THIS FILM that it'd simply be unfair to judge the film on its few problems.
So overall, A SIMPLY EXCELLENT PORTRAYAL OF "LIFE AMONG SENIORS" and I wish the director and the cast all the best in the world. This was a story / film WORTHY OF BEING MADE, and I hope that there will be more like this in the future -- despite aforementioned reservations (but mentioned in a vague / non-spoiler alerty way ;-) ... 4 Stars.
For one, this is a film where the main protagonists are two young 20-something women Violeta (played by Camila Soli) and Emilia (played by Tessa Ia). With one, Violeta, dying of cancer, after escaping the hospital, the two go on a Themla & Louise [1991] like road-trip down the Baja California coast. Along the way they encounter a young man (played by Luis Gerardo Méndez) who appeared to really need some help. Apparently unable to speak, and wearing what appeared to be a beat-up motor-cycle helmet, it initially seemed to them that he had had some sort of a terrible motorcycle accident resulting in him having amnesia. HOWEVER ... (not much of a spoiler alert) he turns out to be an extra-terrestrial and one on a very specific and quite somber mission. All this takes place in the context of a massive hurricane, named Mark, approaching the coast from the Pacific Ocean (Note that the most powerful hurricane ever recorded in the Western Hemisphere was Hurricane Patricia which barreled down on the Mexican coast from the Pacific Ocean in 2015).
Well much of course ensues. I did find the film fascinating for being simultaneously a sci-fi themed film and one oriented above all to young women. There are some aspects of this film, notably involving sexuality, that would certainly make the film unsuitable for minors, and more generally put-off many/most adult Catholics. Still, bearing these criticisms in mind, for the college-aged / 20-something crowd, this would make for a thought provoking film, and one that brings to mind some of the themes of the pre-flood chapters of the Book of Genesis. -- 3 Stars
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