This is not the only reason why this attractive, but sullen, young woman looks angry all the time, as she is constantly battling with Junior, who even at this very early age, she suspects may have homosexual tendencies. The boy’s best friend is a potty mouth girl and he prefers to play with her dolls rather than pitch in with the other boys on the Estate and join their rough-horse games. Not only that, but as he has inherited from his father (since departed) an unruly mop of curly hair, he is desperate to have it straightened in time for the obligatory photograph he needs to start High School next time.
It’s yet another reason to continue the running spate with his mother who can barely disguise her loathing for her eldest child, and who chooses to use all her motherly love on the baby instead. However Junior’s paternal grandmother, who has no real love for her ex-daughter in law, is happy to indulge her grandson. She has an ulterior motive though as she would like him to come live with her so that he will be around to take care of her when she gets older. She helps Junior experiment straightening his hair and even makes him a outfit to wear for the photograph. It’s based on one that his favorite pop idol wears but when the end result looks too girly for him, he starts to fight with his grandmother too.
Junior is to young to understand what he is feeling and his fawning admiration for handsome teenager Mario who runs a news kiosk could of course be just a schoolboy crush, but Marta has already decided that it is unhealthy and is the reason that her effeminate son is developing into something that she so obviously finds abhorrent. She also knows that as the adult in this situation she has the power and the ultimate control and it’s what she will use to get her own way.
All this family drama is played out against the rapidly changing political instability in Venezuela which is pushing this family (and so many others) into an uncertain future and making sheer financial desperation become a major factor into shaping peoples beliefs and standards. The odd thing that in this patriarchal society Marta is clinging to this outdated attitudes which are rank with homophobia even though the job that she is so desperate to recover for herself is one that is traditional a very masculine occupation.
It is nevertheless a wonderful melodrama that even with the futility of the embittered mother’s position she still wants to fight the natural development of her child even though he obviously has no idea of what he is even happening to him and his sexuality. It is enhanced with a stunningly realistic performance by Samantha Castillo as Marta, and a complete scene-stealing turn by Samuel Lange Zabrina as Junior.
It won writer/director Mariana Rondón the major award at the prestigious San Sebastián International Film Festival but the main reason that this excellent movie deserves our attention is because she chose to tackle the very sensitive subject of budding sexuality, and in a environment/culture that is facing such turmoil right now anyway.