Tigers Are Not Afraid (IMDB says 2017, but it got its US release just this month in 2019)
Dir. and written by Issa López
Starring Paola Lara, Juan Ramón López, Nery Arredondo
There are a few things which seem to be irresistible
to critics. Simple elements which warp normally sensible people into raving
delusional supporters of mediocre garbage. One is seeing films at festivals,
before anybody else, with an excited audience that feels very special just to
have this opportunity. Another is making movies about adult topics, but set
from children’s perspective, so we can juxtapose the innocence of youth against
the grimness of the adult world. Still another is magical realism, which makes
even the shallowest narratives seem mysterious and symbolic and potentially
important. And finally, topical, ripped-from-the-headlines settings which
empathetically document real-life woes and consequently feel very capital “I”
Important.
TIGERS ARE NOT AFRAID has all four, which is
the only explanation I can think of for the rapturous reception it received
from all quarters, including people who should have known better. I mean,
people have been comparing this to Del Toro, LOS OLVIDASOS, fuckin’100 Years
Of Solitude. It’s a full-blown psychosis, and it seems like I’m the
only one it hasn’t touched. It brings me no joy whatsoever to report this,
because who likes trashing a little indie movie, especially a foreign one made
by people who I have every reason to believe are perfectly sincere about using
their movie to address an ugly real-world truth which is too rarely featured in
cinema, or at least too rarely from this perspective? I don’t wanna be that
guy. But integrity and the fact that I am obligated to review every movie
I watch during October compels me to confess to you that either A) I have
finally fucking lost it, and watching so many awful Z-grade horror movies has
warped my brain so badly that I can’t tell good from bad anymore or B) this
movie is painfully dull, borderline insulting hokum which in no way merits a
97% Rotten Tomatoes score or even its somewhat more moderate 75% on Metacritic.
It does, I'll happily concede, have a
worthwhile scenario: it concerns the orphaned children left behind after their parents
are murdered in the endless, poisonous drug war which has consumed huge
portions of Mexico and Latin America more generally. The city is unnamed (it
was shot in Mexico City), but it barely matters because the movie mostly takes
place in spaces which have essentially been abandoned by the population at
large (who barely appear) and are now home to a Lord Of The Flies
underworld of gangs made up of abandoned, homeless children. And I do mean
children; we see a few teenagers, but mostly these are elementary-school-aged
kids, barely more than babies in some cases. Of course, “elementary school” is
not a great indicator in this case, since street life offers a very different
kind of education.
We enter this world through the eyes of
Estrella (Paola Lara, in her first feature film), a young girl on what she will
discover is her last day in school. It's not a good one. A shower of gunshots
nearby forces the kids to cower on the floor, and a well-meaning teacher tries
to give her comfort by placing three wish-granting sticks of chalk in her hand.
And the day gets worse – a supernatural trail of blood follows her, and when
she gets home, she finds her mother has vanished. When she wishes on the magic
chalk for her to return, she is rewarded by a visit from her mother's ghostly,
zombified body, wrapped in a plastic body bag a la SICARIO.
With no one to care for her, Estrella is forced out onto the street, where she
meets a gang of orphans led by Shine (Juan Ramón López, also in his first film
role), a tormented, angsty Jeremy Sisto type, in, uh, a 10-year old's body.
He's always staring off into the middle distance moodily, and is too cynical
and disaffected to feel anything but irritation at taking on a newcomer. Still,
she tags along with him and his gang, and gradually comes to be involved in
their conflict with a very adult gang of killers who are (semi-spoiler, if
you've never seen a movie before) seeking a stolen cell phone with
incriminating information about their leader, who happens to moonlight as a
smarmy political candidate. This arranges the plot into something like a crime
thriller, albeit one that crops up only where it's absolutely narratively
necessary; the movie is much more interested to following the kids as they
play, fight, and try to entertain themselves and survive without any resources.
There's nothing overwhelmingly original here,
but that's a workable enough premise, at least offering a semi-exotic mix of
topical misery porn and light fantasy elements. The problem is that the
pleasures here are almost exclusively conceptual. It's a movie that very much
resembles a movie with something to say, without ever actually getting around
to saying anything. It frankly feels calculating and manipulative, preying on
our natural sympathy for suffering children and using that to paper over how
shallow the characterization is, let alone the transparently functional
narrative. It's a film that has sympathy, but no real ideas, and certainly no
real examination of its premise. The characters are paper-thin, the thriller elements
are threadbare, and the fantasy –let alone any phony claim of “horror”—irrelevant.
The lack of effective genre elements is
damning, but since the movie spends most of its time as a drama, it’s really
the superficial characterization that dooms it. No offense to the child actors,
who are doing the best they can with what they have, but their dialogue
oscillates between gratingly precocious and insufferably cutesy, with no
internal logic to guide it.* Shine's silly tough guy demeanor could be made
interesting – perhaps it is his “tiger suit” that he puts on to feel brave,
constructed from the stilted pop culture it so closely mimics. But the movie
makes nothing of it; by its estimation this is perfectly natural behavior which
needs no further examination (for the record, Ramón López does as well with the role as any human could have). Likewise, it stubbornly refuses to engage with
Estrella's emotional state beyond the most superficial terms. Sure, she's sad,
she's scared, she's angry at the people who did this. But surely there are
subtler, more interesting feelings here too, especially for a child, who
doesn't have the experience to know what to do with them. What does the sudden,
disorienting plunge from unquestioned security to complete vulnerability do to
her? How does her outsider status in the group affect the way she sees herself and
her role? The movie doesn't ask. In theory, the magical realism ought to be a
perfect way for us to symbolically get inside her unexpressed inner world, but
the only use the movie ever finds for its fantasy elements is to throw
something vaguely spooky at Estrella. Little flying dragons, the ominous trail
of blood, a handful of moments where she sees ghosts. You know, to communicate
that most intangible and ephemeral of human emotions, “being anxious that
gangster want to kill you.” How ever would we depict that without tiny computer
animated dragons?
It is, in a word, shallow. It poses that
children deal with this kind of unbearable trauma by escaping into fantasy. And
then, that’s it. That’s the film’s only card, and once it’s played, there’s
nothing else to it but a rote, half-hearted thriller plot which sort of happens
in the background, though not as far in the background as the supposed horror
elements, which make up maybe five minutes of the total runtime. In fact,
despite the fact that there’s a zombie on the goddam poster, this very much
feels to me like one of those movies that the director wanted to make, but
couldn’t get funded until she pitched it as a genre flick, so she obligingly
crammed a little bit of second-unit zombie crap in there and spliced it into
the story every so often to paper over the fact that it is in absolutely no way
whatsoever a horror film.
This puts the film in an unfortunate contradictory
position; it badly wants to be a searing indictment of the intolerable current socio-political
situation, complete with some ham-fisted jabs at cynical politicians and
corrupt cops. And yet, it needs the schlocky genre stuff to be a story worth
telling, or at least, a story which many people would seek out. But throwing a
frankly laughable crime-thriller plot into this kind of realist miserabilism is
a bad fit, making the drama seem phony and making the genre stuff seem
ridiculous. How the fuck are we supposed to be scared of a gang of killers
which consists, apparently, of only four guys, all of whom are consistently
unable to wrangle a cell phone away from five scared 3rd-graders? And for that
matter, the earnest journalistic urge to call attention to drug war orphans and
their grim and separate underworld can't help but force us to think a little
bit about how this would work, at which point huge plot holes start to open up.
Shine won't give up the stolen cell phone, even though holding onto it puts
everyone in desperate mortal peril, because it has the only picture of his mom
on it. Awww. But dawg, you realize that shit is in the cloud, right? You can
have a photobucket account in 20 seconds for free. He clearly understands the
phone and how it works, using it like a pro when he needs to. The fact that
this obvious solution never comes up is a matter of strictly dramatic expediency.
And for that matter, how is he charging this thing? It's just lazy writing.
I hate complaining about plot holes; I think
it’s generally lazy criticism, and anyway they tend to be bothersome only when
film is already not working for some other reason. A movie that has you appropriately
entranced need not bother with logic, so I usually try to focus on why a film
has me bored enough to notice plot holes, rather than the holes themselves. But
I bring them up here because I think it helps illustrate the way the film struggles
to establish a clear identity for itself. Several reviewers have postulated,
for example, that this should be read as, essentially, a fairy tale for adults.
Which, fine, the very concept of a “fairy tale for adults” is already a little
insulting, but some people obviously get off on that, who am I to judge. If that’s
so, grousing about logic is missing the point. But the minute you call it a
fairy tale, you are irrecoverably giving up on the idea of muckraking realism
for a cause, and that is, frankly, where the movie's actual passions seem to
lie. You can have brutal, journalistic naturalism, or you can have symbolic whimsy;
crudely sewing the two approaches together is self-defeating. And of the two
approaches on display here, the naturalistic drama is far and away more
effective, which makes you resent the constant intrusions of “fairy tale” material
that doesn't seem to arise naturally from the premise, and in fact often feels
like an active detriment. At one point, a kid's stuffed tiger comes to life via
disconcerting computer animation and interacts with our heroine. Why? There's
nothing, like, symbolic happening here. It feels like an affectation for its
own sake. Likewise, Estrella's “three wishes” which are doomed to turn out
badly. If we're not meant to take this literally, as a simplistic plot
mechanic, well... how should we take it? It doesn’t really
mean anything, it’s just a thing that would be in a fairy tale, I guess. But in
a fairy tale, at least it would have a moral, the obvious “be careful what you
wish for.” Here, I don’t see how that message has any bearing. The final wish,
in particular, seems like such a transparently manipulative, arbitrary setup
that it made me actively angry. This is not using magical realism to
communicate mysterious hidden realities; this is just using it as a lazy crutch
to set up a tearjerker moment which would otherwise have to be more subtly
written.
I will grant that the movie eventually works
up a suitable climax, which does manage to tie its thriller plot into its
vestigial horror imagery, at least narratively, if not really thematically.
It's as cheap and calculating as everything else here, but at least it's
marginally satisfying, and I was, I suppose, invested enough in the story by
this point to be glad of that. It's a dithering, facile movie, but it's not a
terrible one, as far as these things go; I think I resented it more than I
really disliked it. If I hadn’t read all those glowing reviews beforehand,
I’d probably be willing to write it off as a mediocre but well-meaning little
tearjerker drama, one that doesn’t really work but deserves credit for trying.
But I think it’s gotten plenty of credit for trying already.
* I should be said that it’s always a tricky business to
evaluate dialogue that’s been translated into subtitled; it’s possible this
plays more organically in its original Spanish.
CHAINSAWNUKAH 2019 CHECKLIST!
For
Richer or Horror
TAGLINE
|
None.
|
TITLE
ACCURACY
|
It’s
something they say, and the movie is very much about how kids deal with fear
by escaping to fantasy.
|
LITERARY
ADAPTATION?
|
No
|
SEQUEL?
|
None
|
REMAKE?
|
None.
|
COUNTRY
OF ORIGIN
|
Mexico
|
HORROR
SUB-GENRE
|
Very,
very light ghost movie trops
|
SLUMMING
A-LISTER?
|
None
|
BELOVED
HORROR ICON?
|
None
|
NUDITY?
|
No
|
SEXUAL
ASSAULT?
|
No
|
WHEN
ANIMALS ATTACK!
|
No,
although we hear about a tiger attack
|
GHOST/
ZOMBIE / HAUNTED BUILDING?
|
Yes,
ghosts
|
POSSESSION?
|
None
|
CREEPY
DOLLS?
|
I
find the little animated Tiger quite creepy in a live-action WHINNE THE POOH
kind of way.
|
EVIL
CULT?
|
None
|
MADNESS?
|
None
|
TRANSMOGRIFICATION?
|
No
|
VOYEURISM?
|
None.
|
MORAL
OF THE STORY
|
Whatever
you think about Del Toro, this shit isn’t as easy as he makes it look.
|
This is exactly the kind of movie that makes one wish for a half-thumb; I felt like giving it just two was too harsh, because it's nowhere near as hapless as, say, THE BEING. But three makes it sound like a vague positive, and I can't quite go that far either. Think of it as two thumbs and a pinkie. |
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