There are hardly family ties to keep the kids there as the twins father is cheating on their mother, and Raul’s prostitute mother suffering with AIDS is still ‘working’ the street even though she lacks any medication. When Raul attacks and hurts a tourist ‘client’ who his mother has picked up, it escalates his need to leave as the Police are now searching for him.
So Elio spends this last day being very resourceful as he knows that he needs to procure inner tubes, lumber, a compass, and maybe even a GPS, for the journey. He has little cash, but that is hardly a deterrent as all of this can be found on the flourishing black market usually by bartering. His bike is the first thing to be traded in for an outboard motor.
Their very crude craft that they strap together will make the 90 mile ocean journey very precarious in the least especially when they discover that neither the motor, nor the GPS, work so they are left with no alternative than just to row and pray.
It’s a heartwarming tale that despite its poignant sad tragedy, is full of life and hope as these impassioned rather colorful assertive kids seek a better future for themselves. The fact that there are undercurrents of lust/love : Elio for Raul, and Raul for Lila, plus Lila’s overpowering devotion for Elio, added more than a frisson to the story.
Stunningly photographed that you get a real sense of the whole unsettling environment of a impoverished city that is struggling to adapt and survive in a world that it is so alien to.
The real joy is the three young leads, all local non-professional actors, who gave such brilliant convincing performances as if this was in fact their own life stories. In fact they were not, but in a twist of reality, the pair playing brother and sister ‘disappeared’ when they were en route to the movie’s Premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival in NY, and are now currently seeking asylum in Miami.
★★★★★★★★
Available at Amazon VOD/DVD