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Saturday, Apr 24, 2010
6:40 pm
The Famous and the Dead
A sixteen-year-old loner goes by the handle Mr. Tambourine Man in honor of his hero, Bob Dylan, but even as he ponders attending a faraway Dylan concert, his real obsession is with the dark, romantic online videos of a couple from his own town. The girl, the sister of his best friend, recently died, and the reappearance of her charismatic, sinister boyfriend fills Mr. Tambourine Man with fascination, longing, and dread. First-time feature director Esmir Filho and actor/screenwriter Ismael Caneppele adapted this enigmatic coming-of-age drama from Caneppele's own novel, with an emphasis on mood over incident. The story unfolds elliptically, the reasons for Mr. Tambourine Man's disquiet and the malaise infecting the entire town only gradually becoming clear. There are shades of David Lynch in the tale's dreaminess as well as its location: a fog-shrouded town in southern Brazil, where the cheeriness of a local festival is less a respite from general despair than a mask that hides it. The drama's gorgeous widescreen images emphasize the surreal isolation of the place-a remoteness that suggests no hope of escape and only adds fuel to Mr. Tambourine Man's angst. Winner of the FIPRESCI Prize and Best Film at the Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival, Filho's mysterious and melancholy debut is as intriguing as it is unforgettable.
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