Film Review
After a fairly uninspired period of filmmaking in Mexico in the 1940s, the Spanish-born
director Luis Buñuel won instant international acclaim with this extraordinarily
grim portrayal of the lost children of Mexico. Made in the style of the Italian
neo-realists, with non-professional actors and natural locations, the film is uncompromisingly
brutal and pessimistic in its depiction of a group of hopeless wretches who are destined
to live and die in squalid obscurity, deprived of even the most basic benefits afforded
by modern society.
Like Buñuel's earlier Spanish film
Las Hurdes (1933),
which offers a similarly depressing portrait of individuals locked
in crushing poverty,
Los Olvidados is not an easy film
to watch but it demands our attention. The sickening cruelty
displayed by the film's supposed heroes;
as they torment and destroy without conscience is matched by the equally grotesque society
which has bred them. Yet Buñuel's unique cinematic style, embroidered
with poetry and cynicism, makes this a film that is totally compelling, in spite of its
horrific content.
Most memorable is the dream sequence in which the boy Pedro
imagines his insensitive mother to be the Madonna. The dream is a subconscious expression
of Pedro's guilt and desires and ends as a nightmare in which his transfigured mother
feeds rotting meat to his so-called friend Jaibo. Only a genius of Buñuel's
standing could have got away with this stroke of artistic brilliance, grafting an incredible
piece of surrealist art onto a gritty social realist drama. Not only is this sequence
stunningly filmed, it is laden with many layers of symbolism and serves as a coda for
the entire film.
Predictably,
Los Olvidados created an uproar when
it was released in Mexico. The labour unions and hyper-nationalistic
press condemned the film for dishonouring their country. The jury at the 1951 Cannes
Film Festival took a different view and rewarded Buñuel with the Best Director
Award. In an age when the gulf between the world's wealthiest and the poorest
continues to increase, the film still has an immense social relevance. It doesn't
merely prick the conscience. To quote the critic André Bazin, "[It]
lashes the mind like a red-hot iron."
© James Travers 2004
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Luis Buñuel film:
A Woman Without Love (1952)
Film Synopsis
Behind every beautiful city are poor children... In the slums of Mexico City,
a gang of unruly youths take out their frustrations on those less fortunate than themselves.
They rob from a blind man, they attack a cripple, they kill animals... The gang
leader is El Jaibo, a vicious teenager who has just been released from prison. He
sates his revenge by beating another young man to death, witnessed by his young acolyte
Pedro. In a vain attempt to win his mother's affection, Pedro tries to make
an honest life and starts an apprenticeship. But, thanks to Jaibo's intervention,
Pedro ends up being arrested for theft. Taken to a centre for rehabilitating
child criminals, Pedro has one last chance to start a new life. Unfortunately, Fate
- aided once more by Jaibo - has other ideas...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.