KallioWeHardlyKnewYe
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- May 30, 2003
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La Libertad
Alonso (2001)
**crickets chirp**
A day in the life of a man living on his own, chopping and selling wood and noshing on some BBQ armadillo in rural Argentina.
La Libertad is a certain type of movie that I’m glad exists and yet I rarely ever want to spend time with. I appreciate it and am certainly glad it’s a very lean 70 minutes or so but I won’t be missing it now that it’s gone. It’s not really a character piece and it’s not really about process. It’s just kinda there. I think I would have preferred a straight documentary on a similar individual or the same subject. Surely that would be more interesting and engaging? Perhaps that’s a pretty basic opinion, but so be it. I’m all for using fiction to reveal truths, but when your points and execution are so banal, I’d rather see it made with a genuine article, not an actor. The last scene though with the lightning flashing in the background is nice and I thought the brief split from our protagonist’s world, where the camera goes careening off on its own through a windy day, was a welcome break. Otherwise, I thought the execution was sort of generic — man walks through woods from left of screen to right, cut to man walking left to right, cut to man walking left to right. The question of whether or not this man is “free” didn’t really take hold with me. I might be hindered by the fact that the version I tracked down did not have subtitles, though I suspect the actual discussions aren’t that important. Credit to all involved that the gist is conveyed fairly well with action and expression.
If I were a more obnoxious and confrontational film observer, this is the type of movie I’d be tempted to call bullshit on people actually liking and enjoying as it exists at one of the extremes of arty snobbery. But I’m not, so I won’t.
Glad it’s in the world, but it’s 100% not for me.
Alonso (2001)
**crickets chirp**
A day in the life of a man living on his own, chopping and selling wood and noshing on some BBQ armadillo in rural Argentina.
La Libertad is a certain type of movie that I’m glad exists and yet I rarely ever want to spend time with. I appreciate it and am certainly glad it’s a very lean 70 minutes or so but I won’t be missing it now that it’s gone. It’s not really a character piece and it’s not really about process. It’s just kinda there. I think I would have preferred a straight documentary on a similar individual or the same subject. Surely that would be more interesting and engaging? Perhaps that’s a pretty basic opinion, but so be it. I’m all for using fiction to reveal truths, but when your points and execution are so banal, I’d rather see it made with a genuine article, not an actor. The last scene though with the lightning flashing in the background is nice and I thought the brief split from our protagonist’s world, where the camera goes careening off on its own through a windy day, was a welcome break. Otherwise, I thought the execution was sort of generic — man walks through woods from left of screen to right, cut to man walking left to right, cut to man walking left to right. The question of whether or not this man is “free” didn’t really take hold with me. I might be hindered by the fact that the version I tracked down did not have subtitles, though I suspect the actual discussions aren’t that important. Credit to all involved that the gist is conveyed fairly well with action and expression.
If I were a more obnoxious and confrontational film observer, this is the type of movie I’d be tempted to call bullshit on people actually liking and enjoying as it exists at one of the extremes of arty snobbery. But I’m not, so I won’t.
Glad it’s in the world, but it’s 100% not for me.