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Antonio Caido
(1996) 55 minutes
Directed by Rosane Chamecki
and Andrea Lerner What if Virginia had not stolen Antonio's
car? Or, what if Julio had not gone to the bathroom to buy cigarettes?
What if... Antonio Caido... is the finest
composition these women from Brazil have yet made - a collage
in which scraps of information gradually build formal and emotional
tension... The work beautifully, poignantly, angrily exposes the
myriad death we suffer when someone we love suddenly falls our
of the world. Seldom is a dance at once
as enigmatic and crystal clear as "Antonio Caido" is.
Movement so satisfying in itself for qualities of line, dynamics,
use of energy and structure - rarely occurs in a dramatic context
so well defined. The story is wrenching and painful; the telling
is elegant and terse. "Antonio Caido"
lives up to its considerable ambition in its flowing stream of
prickly incidents and seamless integration of light, sound, movement
and film. ChameckiLerner proffer visceral
images of their misfortunes and loss by inventing full-bodied
gestures and unpredictable interactions. They physicalize the
anxiety, helplessness, rage and passion evoked by Antonio's death
in a way that is both particular and universal. They force viewers
to consider that any one could find him or herself in a similarly
wrenching predicament. A turmoil of metaphoric images, perceived with poetry and humor. Antonio Caido manages, at the same time, to be beautiful and conceptual, without being narrative. The images suggest a deep movement investigation along with a coherent use of their scenic possibilities. |