Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA determined teenager must rely on her own wits when her fractured family abandons her.A determined teenager must rely on her own wits when her fractured family abandons her.A determined teenager must rely on her own wits when her fractured family abandons her.
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I really enjoyed this movie. It gives you a glimpse of the poor, rural and less known Chile. The actors in the movie are very credible and give you a sense of very "ordinary" people. I watched the movie in Spanish and even their accent/dialect feels genuine. Manuela Martelli (Kathy) has the power to absorb you completely in the story and her performance justifies well the various international awards for best actress. In the story you see Kathy as a very strong, independent woman who has learned not to fear anything. She repeatedly says in the movie "ya no le tengo miedo a nada" (I no longer fear anything) and she adds her unsettling/scary new experiences to her list of things she does not fear. She is a child forced to grow really fast and to face circumstances that will break many of us--yes she relies on her inner strength to overcome her circumstances. At the same time you are able to see Kathy's vulnerability and her longing for love and affection. This is a drama with strong scenes that at times made me uncomfortable--but nevertheless a very well done film.
Gonzalo Justiniano, the director of "B-Happy" shows he has an eye to capture ordinary people in their natural habitat, as he demonstrates with this feature. He works in a sort of episodic way as most of the scenes end in a black dissolve. This choppy way for the narrative is the only thing that doesn't make the film flow more freely, but as a character study, we are shown real people going through a life that has not been kind to them.
At the center of the story we see young Kathy. Living in the country side, this young woman must commute to her school every day. Her mother works for the local general store and her brother doesn't seem to be any help to either woman. The father, we find out, is in prison. We see both mother and daughter, who seems not to know her own father, pay him a visit in the Valparaiso jail where he is serving time.
When the father returns, he proves to be no help to his wife and Kathy. He goes back to his bad ways. The only positive thing for the young girl is her school. The kind teacher, who is married to the grocer, holds Kathy in high regard. The arrival of Chemo, the handsome young man who befriends Kathy works wonders for her. Suddenly she feels being wanted and accepted. Chemo's ambition is to go north to Arica, a town that seems to hold a special allure in his imagination.
Things don't go too well for Kathy. She witnesses her family disintegrate in front of her eyes. This is when reality sets in. It's clear that Kathy must leave town in order to get a better life, but bad breaks follow her when she arrives in Valparaiso. The only kind person to her is the transvestite that lives on a boat in the harbor, but alas, the friendship is not a lasting one. Finally we see as Kathy is at the bus station buying a ticket to Arica, where one is to expect she finds a better life.
Manuela Martelli makes an incredible Kathy. She is in almost every frame of the film. Her face registers all what is going inside herself. An excellent performance by this young actress. Also good, Eduardo Barril as the good for nothing father. Lorena Prieto is the mother. Juan Pablo Saez plays Nina and Ricardo Fernandez is Chemo, the young man who inspires Kathy to flee her surroundings.
At the center of the story we see young Kathy. Living in the country side, this young woman must commute to her school every day. Her mother works for the local general store and her brother doesn't seem to be any help to either woman. The father, we find out, is in prison. We see both mother and daughter, who seems not to know her own father, pay him a visit in the Valparaiso jail where he is serving time.
When the father returns, he proves to be no help to his wife and Kathy. He goes back to his bad ways. The only positive thing for the young girl is her school. The kind teacher, who is married to the grocer, holds Kathy in high regard. The arrival of Chemo, the handsome young man who befriends Kathy works wonders for her. Suddenly she feels being wanted and accepted. Chemo's ambition is to go north to Arica, a town that seems to hold a special allure in his imagination.
Things don't go too well for Kathy. She witnesses her family disintegrate in front of her eyes. This is when reality sets in. It's clear that Kathy must leave town in order to get a better life, but bad breaks follow her when she arrives in Valparaiso. The only kind person to her is the transvestite that lives on a boat in the harbor, but alas, the friendship is not a lasting one. Finally we see as Kathy is at the bus station buying a ticket to Arica, where one is to expect she finds a better life.
Manuela Martelli makes an incredible Kathy. She is in almost every frame of the film. Her face registers all what is going inside herself. An excellent performance by this young actress. Also good, Eduardo Barril as the good for nothing father. Lorena Prieto is the mother. Juan Pablo Saez plays Nina and Ricardo Fernandez is Chemo, the young man who inspires Kathy to flee her surroundings.
Director Gonzalo Justiniano's "B-Happy", along with "Machuca" (2004) proves that Chile can compete with Argentina's new wave and avant-garde cinema, though the latter is getting most of the worldwide recognition now.
"B-Happy", whose title is taken from an English phrase written on the blackboard in the lead character's classroom, tells the bleak story of Katty, whose family slowly abandon hers forcing her to rely on her own wits. The movie's narration, never losing focus from the lead character, is completely devoid of any sentimentality and is matter-of-factly and bluntly told in a series of vignettes, which resemble visual postcards. Kathy's father is incarcerated and her mother works in the general store. We get the feeling that Katty doesn't know her father that well, but in a moving scene he proudly relates the history--and resilience--of the family name.
The movie's bleakness is punctuated by the barren Chilean landscape which could substitute as a visual metaphor for the quiet desperation which young fifteen year old Katty must feel. The cinematography is stunningly impressive. Actress Manuela Martelli (Katty) portrays her character's suffering stoicly, with little emoting--her repeated mantra to the world is: "I'm not afraid of anything". She approaches each unpleasant event she is forced to contend with in the same detached, stoic manner. One scene which sticks with me ends with Katty sitting catatonic contemplates her bleak and worsening situation with a sad resignation. Unlike the character Maria for example, in "Maria, Full of Grace" she lacks any kind of carisma or inner conflict about what she does--in fact, she seems to embrace it, with gusto. She eventually must take drastic steps in order to survive, because, as she notes in one scene where she loses her virginity, "The only thing you can control is your first one". Katty is repeatedly victimized by a cruel system and society's unscrupulous, though she soon proves she is anything but a victim. One can't help but feel sympathy for her, but her Martelli's stoic characterization and the director's unique telling of the story-- (in short vignettes, some lasting less than 15 seconds)-- prevents the movie from turning into one cliché after another. Never once does she feels sorry for herself--the only sentimentality she allows herself is keeping a Polaroid taken of herself and her father, with a llama at the zoo. She wishes things could be different but they aren't, so she deals with the cards dealt her pragmatically, without allowing sentimentality to overcome her.
The second part of the movie takes place in the Chilean port city of Valpariso, as Katty sets out on a quest to locate her father, and the movie takes a predictable course without really going anywhere--this is, after all a character study with distinct noirish elements, especially with the gritty Chilean port of Valpairiso featured prominently. A good companion piece to compare this picture with is Argentinian director Maria Victoria Menis' "Little Sky", "El Cielito" (2004)--just as bleak but with the same theme.
"B-Happy", whose title is taken from an English phrase written on the blackboard in the lead character's classroom, tells the bleak story of Katty, whose family slowly abandon hers forcing her to rely on her own wits. The movie's narration, never losing focus from the lead character, is completely devoid of any sentimentality and is matter-of-factly and bluntly told in a series of vignettes, which resemble visual postcards. Kathy's father is incarcerated and her mother works in the general store. We get the feeling that Katty doesn't know her father that well, but in a moving scene he proudly relates the history--and resilience--of the family name.
The movie's bleakness is punctuated by the barren Chilean landscape which could substitute as a visual metaphor for the quiet desperation which young fifteen year old Katty must feel. The cinematography is stunningly impressive. Actress Manuela Martelli (Katty) portrays her character's suffering stoicly, with little emoting--her repeated mantra to the world is: "I'm not afraid of anything". She approaches each unpleasant event she is forced to contend with in the same detached, stoic manner. One scene which sticks with me ends with Katty sitting catatonic contemplates her bleak and worsening situation with a sad resignation. Unlike the character Maria for example, in "Maria, Full of Grace" she lacks any kind of carisma or inner conflict about what she does--in fact, she seems to embrace it, with gusto. She eventually must take drastic steps in order to survive, because, as she notes in one scene where she loses her virginity, "The only thing you can control is your first one". Katty is repeatedly victimized by a cruel system and society's unscrupulous, though she soon proves she is anything but a victim. One can't help but feel sympathy for her, but her Martelli's stoic characterization and the director's unique telling of the story-- (in short vignettes, some lasting less than 15 seconds)-- prevents the movie from turning into one cliché after another. Never once does she feels sorry for herself--the only sentimentality she allows herself is keeping a Polaroid taken of herself and her father, with a llama at the zoo. She wishes things could be different but they aren't, so she deals with the cards dealt her pragmatically, without allowing sentimentality to overcome her.
The second part of the movie takes place in the Chilean port city of Valpariso, as Katty sets out on a quest to locate her father, and the movie takes a predictable course without really going anywhere--this is, after all a character study with distinct noirish elements, especially with the gritty Chilean port of Valpairiso featured prominently. A good companion piece to compare this picture with is Argentinian director Maria Victoria Menis' "Little Sky", "El Cielito" (2004)--just as bleak but with the same theme.
Have you noticed how do simple movies had have a huge impact on the audience this last time? Just Think about ELEPHANT, for example. Plain story, wonderfully worked, acted, directed and filmed: nothing else needed. When a movie is well crafted, and the emotional intentions are correctly delivered to the audience, the most plain, stick man-acted, midi-sound-tracked story can receive a 20 minutes stand up ovation on Cannes. This is a fact, ans it is one of the most actually used formats on contemporary films. But, B-Happy isn't just plain, like a valley covered on green moisturized grass, is a mud filled down sloped crater. It is a awfully bad directed story, as told by a 15 year old kid who grades an F on grammar. The image is not clean: between scenes, you can tell when it's gonna be changed by noticing a slight brightening on the picture, which is really disturbing for the viewer's eye. Manuela Martelli proves once again, that her fame as a good actress is, in fact, mysterious: she just accomplishes with saying the lines and walking through the set. This film doesn't reach for the viewer's heart, it has no genuine feeling, and stimulates the unfortunate sensation that Chilean Film Industry goes nowhere. For real Feelings on a Chilean movie, Try Silvio Caiozzi, Boris Quercia, Gregory Cohen, just to name some.
Justiniano gave us a real one this time. This movie is shocking, frightening, and sometimes depressing, but the main character Martelli (Kathy) is always looking, without any fear, the way to survive the tragedy that the life can be for someones. Located in Valparaiso, the landscape are beautiful and the different rural locations are just like Chile really is. The director gave us a realistic view of Valparaiso, not the glam side of the city, but the dark and gloomy part of the harbor, that Valparaiso is. This movie is a great opportunity to entrance to the chilean movies, and I think that this movie it's a must seen for every chilean. Because you can recognize and watch a very accurate point of view of the people of the lately '90.
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- 1 Std. 30 Min.(90 min)
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