Los silencios (2018) Poster

(2018)

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8/10
Eerie, haunting movie
hof-46 September 2019
The Isla de la Fantasía (Fantasy Island) was formed not many years ago from accumulation of silt in the Amazon river. The eastern shore faces the town of Leticia, Colombia while the western fronts the Peruvian Chinería island. A few kilometers downriver the boundaries of Colombia, Peru and Brazil intersect at a point on the waters. The island has been gradually colonized by families without much resources. Many of the inhabitants are refugees from poverty or violence. Life in the island is not easy; during four months of the year it lies under the waters, thus the typical dwellings are cottages on stilts. During these months the only links between houses are canoes and precarious passageways. In spite of the harsh conditions children attend a cheerful looking school and islanders have meetings to discuss their living conditions and their future.

The protagonists are Amparo, who is fleeing the Colombian armed conflict and her children Nuria and Fabio. The first scene takes place in inky darkness and shows the family in a small canoe, arriving in the island and being received by Doña Albina, Amparo's elderly aunt. This begins a haunting tale of struggle and survival where the living and the dead have at times equal rights to reality. If the movie's style could be given a label, it would be "low-key magical realism." The viewer is bewitched by degrees and the last scene, again involving canoes in the darkness is intensely moving.

Direction by Brazilian Beatriz Seigner, who also wrote the script is deliberate and fluid. Cinematography by Colombian Sofia Oggioni gives relief both to the realistic and fantastic aspects of the story. Music is kept to a minimum and noises (such as canoes softly bumping into each other in the shadows) are carefully and purposely used. Acting (both from professional and amateurs) is first rate. A not-to-miss movie.
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7/10
Very good movie!!
BartholomewRoberts16 September 2019
Just saw this movie at my local cinema, I seriously liked it. Great slow-paced script, good direction and incredible acting. The only set back is the editing, some long needles shots that disconnect emotions of the viewers. It's very noticeable that there are real victims of the Colombian violence acting, love that heart-warming touch. Recommended!
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8/10
Fantastic realism in the Amazon frontier between Colombia and Brazil
guisreis10 May 2023
Good Brazilian-Colombian-French film in the border between fiction and documentary portraying harsh problems in the border between Colombia, Brazil and Peru. With several people from that island-village portraying characters wich were similar to themselves, the film has a strong realism close to documentary. Elements of fantastic realism, however, eventually appear while we follow the very earthy fight of a mother to raise alone her child in poverty, to be aknowledged and protected as a refugge, to get a job despite the absolute lack of opportunities, to bear her own losses in the stupid civil war in Colombia. Besides her, the entire community suffers the abuse of powerful businessmen and armed militias who want to oust them of their homes in that island inside the Amazon. Beautifully filmed, strong issues, and intriguing script.
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9/10
Excellent production, rude and pure...
RosanaBotafogo10 July 2021
Warning: Spoilers
A raw reality, filmmaker Beatriz Seigner knew how to capture the cruelty and misfortunes of refugees very well, mixing reality and fiction, where some actors (such as the president and grandmother) are residents of the Island, stupendous family performance, captivating simplicity, mysticism and the belief present in a magical enchanting way... And the outcome, surprising, that plot twist so sweet, so subtle, that makes us wonder, "was that right?" and remembering, everything fits, excellent production, rude and pure... Núria and Adam, father and daughter, were really dead... "It's an unjust war, which we've lived through for more than half a century, because the guerrillas are children of the poor, and the soldiers of the armed force are also for the children of the poor, not for the children of the president, the rich and the businessmen. And the paramilitaries too. They are children of the poor. So we are at war with ourselves."
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