"Pelo Malo" may turn out to be one of the
great films about childhood. It is also one of the few movies that could
loosely fit into the criteria of New Queer Cinema since it deals with
the subject of a nine year old boy who almost certainly will grow up
gay. He lives in the slums of Caracas with his mother and baby brother
and it's his obsession with his hair, among other things, that leads his
mother to conclude that he might, indeed, be gay and she's not the type
of mother who wants a gay son. Fundamentally the issues on display here
are notions of machismo and homophobia and they are treated with a good
deal of sensitivity and some humour by the director Mariana Rondon.
As the boy, little Samuel Lange Zambrano is really quite extraordinary and Samantha Castillo is equally good as the mother struggling to keep her family together. Indeed, the naturalistic acting of the whole cast is to be commended. This is largely down to the intuitive direction of Rondon whose documentary-style approach is not far removed from Italian neo-realism and, although this is only her third feature in 16 years, marks her out as someone to watch.
As the boy, little Samuel Lange Zambrano is really quite extraordinary and Samantha Castillo is equally good as the mother struggling to keep her family together. Indeed, the naturalistic acting of the whole cast is to be commended. This is largely down to the intuitive direction of Rondon whose documentary-style approach is not far removed from Italian neo-realism and, although this is only her third feature in 16 years, marks her out as someone to watch.
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