Eldorado XXI - Critics Round Up criticsroundup.com /film/eldorado-xxi/ 88 of 8 reviews
Eldorado XXI 2016 Eldorado XXI, an immersive non-fiction essay bridging Werner Herzog's postcards from the edge of human resilience and exploration and Wang Bing's minimalist observations of struggling communities, was one of the high points of a particularly strong line-up in this year's Berlinale Forum. The director and her wildly talented cinematographer, Luis Armando Arteaga, clearly understand that showing is often the most effective means of telling, and Arteaga’s eye is perhaps best on display in the film’s second half, which changes locations more readily to offer up surreal landscapes, an eerily masked celebration by firelight, and a brightly lit religious procession laden in reflective gold. Eldorado XXI’s two-part structure demonstrates Lamas’s interest in first hearing directly from those she documents. The extended narration of the film’s first hour contextualises the following sequences, ensuring that the voices of those that live in this habitat speak for themselves. This is essential to framing the apparent harshness of their experience on their own terms, and makes for a truly remarkable, atmospheric work whose astonishing words and images linger in the mind. Eldorado XXI’s post-credits long shot recalls the astonishing opening image of a trail of men trudging up a Peruvian mountain side in search of wealth in Werner Herzog’s Aguirre: The Wrath of God (1972). Only, in Salomé Lamas’s new documentary this image, captured by a static camera shot, is held for one hour... Dusk turns into pitch black night and the Sisyphean snake-like polonaise of worker ants turns into a vertiginous dance of helmet headlights. The images are to test our limits. It is almost unbearably monotonous, but that is also its power. Surely the footage is continuous, though it feels like an endless loop... In her search for truth [Lamas] has documented something far more dramatic than the landscape. It is the dramatic realisation that this looks
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like we might imagine the end of the world is because it is the world of today: depraved, depressed and with an uncertain humanity. Despite its initial rigidity, Lamas's style continually yields surprises like a shock cut to a hip-hop dance party around a bonfire, a blink-and-you-miss-it glimpse of dogs roughhousing, or a front-row view of a boisterous marching band playing to a crowd of worshippers. Taken in toto, Eldorado XXI is a palpably well-intentioned exercise in the extension of sympathy and the raising of awareness. It's just a shame that its esthetic extremities will end up restricting its potential reach: Lamas has constructed an exquisite cinematic sermon, one likely to accumulate prizes aplenty. But at the moment it sounds very much like she's preaching to the choir. [The second half] both over-complicates the film structurally and also represents a bit of bet-hedging, as if Lamas wanted her film to have its self-congratulatory art film difficulty and eat the trendy socioethnographic cake, too. Its formalism, in retrospect, feels a bit disingenuous, even elitist; why make an effort to clear the room— to alienate all but the most righteous “pure cinema” warriors before unpacking the project’s meatier social activism, its more humanizing elements?
More Links Fandor: David Hudson rounds up the reviews March 21, 2016 | ND/NF MUBI's Notebook: Jorge Mourinha interviews Eldorado XXI director Salomé Lamas March 21, 2016 | ND/NF The Film Society of Lincoln Center: Dennis Lim moderates a Q&A with Eldorado XXI director Salomé Lamas April 13, 2016 | ND/NF | Video
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