Posts tagged as:

El secreto de sus ojos

“I remember so many beginnings, but I don’t know which one goes with this story.”

– Benjamin Esposito, El secreto de sus ojos

Unlike the lead character in the film the Liberian Girl and I saw on Sunday night, I do know which beginning goes with this story. It occurred last Friday and the scene starred familiar castmates scotch and Mr. Jared Wade (who may be known to some as Lights Out).

I had been dispatched to Newark, NJ to work a conference on behalf of my daytime employer. After the conference’s Friday proceedings concluded, I PATHed it to midtown Manhattan to connect with Lights Out at a bar that had an excellent selection of scotchy scotch scotch. The night ended pretty late. Saturday morning began quite early. About two hours separated that ending from that beginning.

The Saturday proceedings of my conference concluded late that evening. But not late enough to prevent me from sneaking into a Prince versus Michael Jackson party in SOHO where I met a painter who explained his theory on how the vibrations of the Purple’s music differed from the vibrations produced by the Bad’s catalog. The painter caught me studying a young woman’s undulating hips from afar. He was studying them, too. They oscillated slowly to a Prince song anticipating the man who was bringing her another drink. They were hungry hips. The painter claimed we should thank Prince for inciting the scene.

The Purple, he postulated, vibrated in a way that inspired the urge to engage in the intimacies exchanged between adults (and some teenagers). The Bad, he theorized, vibrated in a way that beckoned people to commune en masse in pursuit of the unpolluted joys most often associated with childhood. You could tell both of these things, he said, by the way the blob of bodies contracted and expanded depending on whose music was being played. When “Darling Nikki” oozed out of the club’s speakers, couples pulled each other close and grinded as the subject of the song was reported to have done. When “Wanna Be Startin’ Something” jumped off the DJ’s platter, people parked at the bar suddenly sprinted to the dance floor where everyone — including the people without much rhythm — danced with everyone else and every mouth opened to sing every word of the song. I was a little bit drunk — and a lot bit tired — but mine own eyes witnessed what the painter was talking about. His argument was quite convincing. It also suggested strongly that the ultimate winner of the 20th Century clash between the Purple and the Bad was … the rest of us.

After the last notes of the last Michael Jackson song closed that Saturday night party, I had just enough time to PATH back to Newark to board a Sunday morning AMTRAK train bound for DC. I closed my eyes as soon as I found a seat. The next time I opened them the sign said Union Station — which is a $5 cab ride from the Liberian Girl’s house in Northwest DC.

I had parked my car at her place before I left town for the conference. I had also made a bargain that I’d spend some time with her on Sunday. After a nap and the Lakers first NBA Playoff game versus Kevin Durant’s team, we scanned the listings for the E Street Cinema and designed a simple evening for ourselves.

Over heaping bowls of noodles at the Noodle Bar on U Street, the Liberian Girl shook her head at my drooping eyes. “You’ll never make it through this movie,” she said. “You’ll be asleep before the last trailer is over.”

“What? Nuh-uh. I’m good.”

“Bet me, then.”

“Okay. Bet. What’s the wager?”

The wager we settled on is not the kind of thing you describe on the internet where your family may someday stumble across it. Let’s just say that no matter who lost, both of us were gonna win.

(Yes, I know. Get to the movie already.)

El secreto de sus ojos translates as The Secret in Their Eyes. The secret — in this Argentinian picture that won Best Foreign Language Film at the 2010 Oscars — is twofold. There is, firstly, the mystery of a 25-year-old unsolved rape-murder. And there is the mystery of why two co-workers — who crushed on each other pretty egregiously — never chose to be more than co-workers to each other. One co-worker, the male lead, is a retired investigator. The other, the female lead, is a lawyer. They shared an office for many years before the investigator retired. As the investigator squirms through an itchy retirement, he scratches the urge to write a novel and peels back two scabs that become the twin conceits of our story.

The primary conceit is the rape-murder. A young banker finds his young wife’s body bloody, beaten and very not alive. The investigator promises the banker he will find the perpetrator and he will bring that dirty son-of-a-bitch to justice. Despite his best efforts, the investigator failed to do either of those things — a shortcoming that continued to haunt the investigator into his retirement. It haunted him to the point that it provided a convenient excuse for the investigator emeritus to visit his former colleague slash would-be lover (the lawyer) to inquire about the unsolved tragedy. The investigator wanted to write about the case. He also wanted to finally solve it. He also also wanted to revisit the love that never was — the secondary conceit.

Both conceits unfold deftly via flashback. There’s a lot of jumping back and forth between present-day and back-in-the-day. The same actors are used in both the present-day and the back-in-the-day scenes. Apart from costuming and set design, the key signifier for what point in time you’re seeing is hair and make-up. The make-up, it seems, is intentionally underwhelming to enable us to clearly connect all of the characters to their former selves. You may find the low-fidelity make-up work to be appalling. You may find it to be charming. Either way, there’s no doubting that its … low-fi. There also isn’t much doubt as to where you are in the timeline.

I was glad for that level of certainty as I struggled to stay awake. That is no indictment of the film. It’s a good story and it is well told. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences says so. If you don’t believe them, you should take the Liberian Girl’s word for it as she liked it a lot. She also liked that she may have won the bet. I’m not sure I dozed all the way off, but I spent a fair part of act two working hard not to succumb to the fatigue I had accumulated in New Jersey and New York. At one point the English subtitles started to split like two taunting cells and they formed a second line of unintelligible text. If hallucination counts as falling asleep, then I suppose the Liberian Girl was right. (Either way, I paid off the bet. She liked that, too.)

I saw enough of the film to know that it was very worthy of the Oscar it won this Spring. Frankly, it could have been recognized for its cinematography as well. Shots are cleverly composed throughout, and close-ups are used to imbue the film with an intimacy that underscores the weight of the two secrets. In one sequence when the investigator is closing in on the rapist/murderer, the filmmakers take us into a crowded futbol stadium via steadicam to search the fans for the lead suspect. There’s some frantic scanning and a chase that ends on the field of play. During the scene, the motion of the camera laces up the audience’s sneakers and forces us to join the chase. It was one of the more poignant uses of steadicam I can remember. Perhaps the most.

I’d like to say more about the story and the secrets. But I’m leery of spoiling it because El secreto de sus ojos is one of the better films of the year and you  should definitely see it. I can tell you that its journey through the past and deeper into the present is not without rewards — or an eye-opening twist.

DYL MAG Rating: 8

{ 0 comments }

I was gonna write this amazing Date Night-style recap of my experience with El secreto de sus ojos. It was gonna weave together the story of a bet I lost with the Liberian Girl as well as a conversation at a bar in SoHo with this painter about the fundamental differences between Michael Jackson and Prince. It was probably gonna have some other stuff in it, too. A brief rant about capital punishment. An ode to great steadicam work. And maybe even an interlude about the asexual, platonic love that men sometimes share with women. (By “sometimes,” I mean 1 in 100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000.)

But then Guru died following a brief battle with cancer.

Guru, for the uninitiated (and the potentially Communist), was a rapper. He worked with a guy named DJ Premier. They recorded together as Gang Starr. They made this song. And this song. And this one, too. They made many more songs, of course. But you may know them best for this one. It was a pretty popular party anthem some years back. In some circles, it still is.

I grew up on hip hop. Not the bad stuff. Well, some of the bad stuff. But mostly the good stuff. Like what Guru and Primo cooked up. I learned a lot from that kind of music. I still quote certain lines almost biblically. Some people draw from the book of Ephesians. I draw from You Know My Steez. We all gotta build a worldview somehow. And the how really shouldn’t be that important as long as the aim of the view is to understand the world empathically so a person can conduct oneself benevolently while living in it. The how, after all, is most commonly a means to an end. Your version of heaven might have a little, blonde-haired kid playing a harp while everyone wears flowy white robes and talks like Ned Flanders. Mine might have Tupac shooting pool with Ernest Hemingway and Che Guevara while Josephine Baker dances with Mikhail Baryshnikov to a Dilla mixtape as Redd Foxx smokes some BBQ. Paradise isn’t the same for everyone. But we’re all trying, more or less, to go to there however it is we imagine it to be.

Guru’s music meant something to me. And his passing moved me. It happened under very unusual circumstances, but it moved me in a way I wasn’t prepared for. Hip hop heads have been losing our icons since Kool Herc first plugged in on Sedgwick Ave. We’re used to death. But we’re not accustomed to cancer. That’s the privilege of the generations who came before us and who didn’t have to use the experience of crack as a default analogy for understanding the things that happen in this world. So, as I struggled with what to think, feel and say, I logged on to Twitter to sort it all out. My timeline was flooded with links and comments and all forms of shout out to the artist whose government name was Keith Elam. I read through a lot of ‘em. Followed a bunch of the links. Listened to a number of Gang Starr songs. Then listened again. I typed a few pretentious characters and posted them because it seemed like the right thing to do.

Maybe it was. But it didn’t feel good. It felt like I was writing to serve some external purpose. To receive validation from my little corner of the Twitter-verse. I looked at what I posted. It was kinda garbage. But it was there. I could have deleted it. But I thought better of that. I recalled a scene from Rocky IV and opted to leave it live as a reminder for myself of what not to do. Here’s the scene I thought of:

If your Russian is rusty, Ivan Drago says “I fight for me! FOR ME!” at the 3:18 mark of that clip. As I was making the decision to leave the lackluster tweet about Guru alone, I contemplated Drago’s motivation and I recognized that his steez are basically my steez. I write for me. (Mostly, I do. Although I write for a woman every once in a while.) I write for me because I’m trying to make sense of the world as I encounter it. And I think, when they’re honest, that’s the steez of every writer. We’re all trying to figure things out. Sometimes, we figure them out in a way that ten other people can relate with. Sometimes, we figure things out in a way that tens of millions of people can relate with. But, when we pick up a pen or begin banging away on a keyboard, we’re writing for ourselves. We are our own primary audience and we’re trying to satisfy something internal. We’re all Ivan Drago.

At least, that’s what we ought to be. ‘Cause when someone hardwires us to some machine to be a hero for the whole nation…things don’t go so well for us. We devolve into pretense and we burp out cliched crap that’s supposed to be deep, but barely scratches the surface of our own somewhat unique struggles with this thing called life.

That’s certainly what happens to me. Audience is hella important. The pages in the book aren’t gonna turn themselves. But if it doesn’t read right to me first, then it’s probably not gonna make any sense to anyone else. That’s not exactly the same thing as The Ivan Drago School of Writing, but it is the best effort I can muster to use a movie blog to pay tribute to one half of Gang Starr.

(Yes, this was a highly convoluted exercise. But I only know how to make sense of the world via movies, music and basketball. So…be thankful I didn’t work some Stephen Curry reference into this thing. Now go drink a glass of lemonade, son. Or stunt like Bruce Willis. Either way … hold tight. A real review of El secreto de sus ojos is coming. Just as soon as I make sense of it all.)

{ 0 comments }