Birds of Passage **** / *****
Directed by: Cristina
Gallego & Ciro Guerra.
Written by: Maria Camila
Arias & Jacques Toulemonde Vidal and Cristina Gallego.
Starring: Carmiña Martínez (Úrsula),
José Acosta (Rapayet), Natalia Reyes (Zaida), Jhon Narváez (Moisés), Greider
Meza (Leonídas), José Vicente (Peregrino), Juan Bautista Martínez (Aníbal), Aslenis
Márquez (Indira), José Naider (Miguel Dionisio), Yanker Díaz (Leonidas as a
Child), Víctor Montero (Isidoro), Joaquín Ramón (Gabriel), Jorge Lascarro
(Sigifredo), Germán Epieyu (Minister), Luisa Alfaro (Victoria), Merija Uriana
(Herminia).
In many
ways, the Colombian film Birds of Passage traffics in gangster movie clichés –
you’ll find elements of The Godfather or GoodFellas or City of God throughout
the terrifically entertaining film. Yes, you can complain about some of that –
or the fact that the movie includes not one but two hotheads who do stupid
things that screw everything up (like Tommy DeVito in GoodFellas or Lil Zee in
City of God), or some of the coincidences in the plot. Yet the film works
despite those minor issues, in part because the film is so well made and
entertaining, but even more because it uses this backdrop to get us inside a
culture we haven’t really seen on screen before – the indigenous Wayuu, of
Northern Columbia, who for generations withstood outside forces who sought to
control them or bring them down. The threat in Birds of Passage comes from
within, as these things often do, when drugs and money become involved. The
film is based on events that happened in the 20-year span between 1960 and 1980
– and if you know anything about Columbia you know it got worse from there.
Here, the drug of choice is marijuana – not cocaine – but the resulting
violence is the same.
The film
doesn’t start off as a gangster movie – it starts off immersing us in the Wayuu
culture – where young woman Zaida (Natalia Reyes) is set to having her coming
out as a woman – ready to be married. Rapayet (Jose Acosta), a poorer man from
a lesser family, immediately makes his intentions clear – he wants to marry
Zaida. Zaida’s powerful mother – Ursula (Carmina Martinez) – who runs her
family – isn’t convinced, and sets the dowry for her daughter ridiculously high
as a way to put off Rapayet’s advances. But he is determined – and soon finds
his way to get the money he needs. He has been dealing in coffee and alcohol –
but seizes an opportunity when he hears some Americans in the Peace Corps want
pot – a lot of pot. His uncle grows pot – and he can fix it so they can all make
money. Soon, he is selling all his uncle to grow to Americans – who export it
back to their country in planes – and things are good. He is married to Zaida,
he is making more money than he can needs, and has become a powerful man
himself. His hotheaded, non-Wayuu partner Moises (Jhon Navaez) then goes ahead
and screws everything up – and while Rapayet pieces things back together, it
sets the stage for another screw-up – Leonidas (Greider Meza) – a decade later
– to eventually screw everything up beyond repair.
The film
was directed by Cristina Gallego and Ciro Guerra – who previously made the
visually stunning Embrace of the Serpent – a black and white film that I
admired visually more than I enjoyed. Here, they are working in color, and the
story is stronger. They are painting on a vast canvas here – with many
characters, over the span of more than a decade, and they never get lost in the
weeds of the story (this is why some of those clichés and coincidences work –
they help move the story along). In many ways, the gangster story here is
familiar – regular guy, Rapayet, gets involved in crime, becomes bigger than he
could ever imagine, but sees it all destroyed by the end – as things have spiraled
into violence, greed and death. The element of the Wayuu make the film feel
unique. The Wayuu are a tradition bound people – and a superstitious one. They
have a way of doing things – beliefs of ghosts, and dreams as omens, word
messengers that must be respected, etc. The Wayuu doesn’t rely on outside
people to help them solve their problems – and they don’t trust them either.
There is a tension between the old and the young here – Ursula believes
wholeheartedly in the Wayuu way – but Rapayet and Zaida are trying to be, at
least, somewhat more modern. What good will being Wayuu do them is it will end
with them getting killed? It turns out, of course, that the way of the Wayuu
only works when everyone respects it – which is easier to do when things are
going well. By the end, the Wayuu may not be destroyed – but part of them has
been – and no one really seems to want to deal with it. The dead have piled up.
Birds of
Passages isn’t a perfect movie – as mentioned, it probably relies on clichés a
little too much (having both Moises and then Leonaidas set in motion massive
violence pretty much singlehandedly feels like a stretch). And Zaida, who we
get the impression early will be a major character, is relegated to the
background very early – and it’s impossible to get a handle on her as a
character. And yet, it’s a fascinating, entertaining gangster movie throughout
– one with more going on than normal. It is also brilliantly directed by
Gallego and Guerra – who present the violence, but don’t glamorize it – much of
it either happens in a flash, or off-screen. The big climax happens in a
longshot, and a flash to the aftermath. They treat this story as the tragedy
that it is – so even with the clichés, you feel the immense tragic nature of
this story – and what has been lost.
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