|
HEADING SOUTH (VERS LE SUD)
PopcornReel.com Movie Review: "Heading South" By Omar P.L. Moore/September 4, 2006
Laurent Cantet's interesting and provocative drama keeps viewers engaged, but not necessarily for the reasons that may draw audiences to see "Heading South", an occasionally erotic film with some provocative if not sometimes disturbing intersections of race, sex and age on the Caribbean island of Haiti in the late 1970's. The French-language film in English subtitles, is about three middle-aged white women (an American, a Canadian and a Francophile professor from Boston) who inhabit Haiti and are not shy about what they are looking for: the young local teenage Black men who spend most of their time relaxing, without jobs and living in fear of Papa Doc Duvalier's tyrannical rule, as it was in its final days.
Each of the women in a mock documentary style describe their feelings about being liberated sexually by the young local men, and one in particular, Brenda (played by Karen Young of "The Sopranos") recalls in explicit detail the time she at age 45 had her first orgasm, courtesy of a then-15-year-old Legba (Manothy Cesar), whom she meets again three years later when returning to Haiti. This time however, Brenda is not alone -- Sue (Louise Portal) and Ellen (the inimitable Charlotte Rampling) are already enjoying the carnal pleasures of the island -- specifically the charismatic Legba, who at 18 has developed a reputation for being a "stud" of sorts among the white women who crave him. This reputation is known to Albert (Lys Ambroise) a senior Haitian native who is a chauffer and restaurant serviceman who declines to serve Legba even though Brenda invites Legba as his guest to her table. The intra-racism of this encounter between Albert and Legba is noteworthy, as is Brenda's response about racism, especially since in a discussion earlier in the film she says that the Blacks in Haiti are "more gracious" than those in America.
By all means, Cantet's film is more an examination of obsessive, rapacious middle-aged women who are in so many words, "raping" young and under-aged men with their appetites for sexual nirvana, than it is about interracial sex. The somber, tragic undercurrent of "Heading South" is the futures of these young Haitian men, who are being "raped" twice it seems, once on a political and economic level by the brutal dictator Duvalier, and a second time on a social-sexual level by these modestly-well-to-do foreign women, tourists who in the words of one older Haitian native man, "don't die". The racial dynamic which may be especially provocative to audiences in America more so than elsewhere, seems to be the least of the film's focuses in the final analysis.
"Heading South" is based on three short stories by Dany
Laferriere. The film is playing in selected American cities and is not
rated. The film's duration is 1 hour 45 minutes and is in French language
with English . The film opened on September 1 in San Francisco and other
parts of the country in an expanded release and will continue to move around
North America. Copyright 2006. PopcornReel.com. All Rights Reserved. |
|
COPYRIGHT 2009. POPCORNREEL.COM. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
|