5 reviews
It starts out as a social-background version of Stephen King's "Christine," but soon becomes another cinematic instrument for talking about populism, corrupt politics and the climate threat. It is such an ambitious film from the thematic point of view, it wants to tell so many things that it ends up being exhausted in a proposal that does not focus on anything specifically. And it resolved without resolution, in a clumsy and incomplete way.
- MiguelAReina
- Feb 2, 2021
- Permalink
The film begins well, seeming promising, but afterwards it shows lack of focus, becoming chaotic. Afterwards, it turns silly and campy, and finally it continues as just a boring cliché with mostly uninspired acting (but still a messy script). Even the well-intentioned discussion on family organic farming seems out of place. This film is definitely not Christine. On what concerns to the hotest scene, it is not 1983 Brazilian movie Black Beetle (Fuscão Preto, Xuxa Meneghel's second best film) either.
- BandSAboutMovies
- Sep 28, 2021
- Permalink
- morrison-dylan-fan
- Mar 20, 2022
- Permalink
Imagine Elliot Silverstein's 1977 "The Car", scripted by a young Glauber Rocha and directed by Jean-Luc Godard in his prime. You will have the same political agenda, the same audiovisual madness, the same slogans turned into dialogue, the same Brechtian performances by non-professionals, and the same script with unconnected scenes, although this one does have a defined structure, and wham!, you have «Carro Rei», a science-fiction pop comedy, with its political primer not at all hidden.
This is definitely a movie for the times of Bolsonaro (or in reaction against his government), but it evokes again the aesthetics of the "cinema novo" and "nouvelle vague", two movements that were crucial in the 1960s for the evolution of film grammar and syntax all over the world (except, I am afraid, Los Angeles).
It tells the story of Uno, an adolescent mulatto (handsome Luciano Pedro Jr.), who can communicate with cars since childhood, and who refuses to follow his father's taxi business and begins to study the laws and methods of agro-industry. When the tycoons of power establish a law that prohibits the circulation of vehicles older than 15 years, the people go rebel.
There is also a crazy uncle who creates "Carro Rei", the monster of the movie (which talks, unlike "The Car", "Christine", or "Duel"!), and becomes a monster himself, played by Matheus Nachtergaele (in a Denis Lavant performance), an Argentine woman out of Cronenberg's "Crash" who has a sexual thing with cars, the followers of Carro Rei getting high with phosphorous drinks, a war between students of agriculture and followers of Carro Rei, and "ideological dialogues" in the Godard's and Rocha's tradition that made me laugh.
Go, see it, and bring your own Coke.
This is definitely a movie for the times of Bolsonaro (or in reaction against his government), but it evokes again the aesthetics of the "cinema novo" and "nouvelle vague", two movements that were crucial in the 1960s for the evolution of film grammar and syntax all over the world (except, I am afraid, Los Angeles).
It tells the story of Uno, an adolescent mulatto (handsome Luciano Pedro Jr.), who can communicate with cars since childhood, and who refuses to follow his father's taxi business and begins to study the laws and methods of agro-industry. When the tycoons of power establish a law that prohibits the circulation of vehicles older than 15 years, the people go rebel.
There is also a crazy uncle who creates "Carro Rei", the monster of the movie (which talks, unlike "The Car", "Christine", or "Duel"!), and becomes a monster himself, played by Matheus Nachtergaele (in a Denis Lavant performance), an Argentine woman out of Cronenberg's "Crash" who has a sexual thing with cars, the followers of Carro Rei getting high with phosphorous drinks, a war between students of agriculture and followers of Carro Rei, and "ideological dialogues" in the Godard's and Rocha's tradition that made me laugh.
Go, see it, and bring your own Coke.