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DVD Review HTF DVD REVIEW: El Norte (1 Viewer)

Matt Hough

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El Norte
Directed by Gregory Nava

Studio: Criterion
Year: 1983
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 anamorphic
Running Time: 140 minutes
Rating: NR
Audio: Dolby Digital 1.0 Mayan/Spanish/English
Subtitles: English
MSRP: $ 39.95

Release Date: January 20, 2009
Review Date: January 14, 2009


The Film

5/5

Gregory Nava’s El Norte pictures the flip side of the American Dream, a haunting, harrowing slap of cold water in the face of complacency regarding undocumented aliens. The journey of the film’s two protagonists is mesmerizing, and its results are not always pleasant, but it’s a trip worth taking and indeed a wake-up call for those sensitive enough to get the director’s motivations and executions.

After the murder of their father and the deportation of their mother by the military, Guatemalan youths Enrique (David Villalpando) and Rosita (Zaide Silvia Gutierrez) know they can’t remain in their village and must emigrate to the United States. Long thinking it a promised land of plenty and privilege due to elaborate photo layouts in magazines like Good Housekeeping that they‘ve seen, the naïve brother and sister set out on a perilous journey to eventually sneak across the border and find gainful employment in Los Angeles. They make it, but only after several traumatic experiences, none of which dampen their spirits but all of which let them know the world has a way of chewing up and spitting out innocents unless they learn to protect themselves.

Director-writer Gregory Nava and his producer-co-writer Anna Thomas have split the saga of the youngsters into three sections: part one takes place in Guatemala as the brutal military junta eliminate any perceived resistance to their control; part two involves the dead ends and repeated attempts to find someone (nicknamed "a coyote") who can get them across the border from Mexico; part three finds them in Los Angeles and adapting surprisingly quickly to the routine of life here until outside forces start to work against them. Nava directs each section with the focus clearly on the faces of his young stars: eager, innocent, determined, but also uncertain and frightened of the unknown in two different lands (Mexico and the United States) of which they know little. Once seen, one will never forget the crawling-over-the-border sequence with its animal skeletons and rat attacks nor will one not find joy as the youngsters first appear to have surprising success with their individual jobs. It’s only fate’s cruel, jealous hand that steps in to spoil their idyll after it had been unthinkably kind to them earlier. But this isn’t melodrama. It seems all too real and possible with the events of the story not ratcheted to artificially extreme emotions but rather simple, true feelings that match the naturalness of the film’s two leading players.

Both Zaide Silvia Gutierrez and David Villalpando couldn’t be more appealing, their sweetness and lack of guile giving them an instant rapport with the audience and earning them top marks when circumstances turn against them making the audience cheer them on that much harder. Lupe Ontiveros is wonderfully supportive as Rosita’s surrogate mother here, and Abel Franco as Raimundo Gutierrez, the coyote who eventually finds a way to get them across the border, has some nice moments, too. Tony Plana turns up in a small but noteworthy role as a busboy envious of Enrique’s quick rise to favored status on the job.


Video Quality

5/5

The film has been framed at 1.78:1 and is anamorphically enhanced. This is a beautiful standard definition transfer, as clear and clean as standard definition is capable of looking. Colors are richly hued, flesh tones are very natural looking, and contrast is crisply achieved delivering a sharp, detailed image that’s a pleasure to view. No artifacts at all mar the viewing experience. This is one of the best DVD transfers in the Criterion Collection. The film has been divided into 26 chapters.

Audio Quality

4/5

The Dolby Digital 1.0 audio track is surprisingly robust for a mono sound mix. Additionally, there are no instances of hiss, pops, crackle, or flutter on the track to disrupt the listening experience.

Special Features

4/5

The audio commentary by director Gregory Nava is well delivered even if he most often begins with describing the scene we’re seeing. He always goes from there into giving details about the filming, the reaction of audiences to what he has done, and his motivations behind his various choices throughout the movie. He has an easy speaking voice, and his intonation is a pleasure to listen to.

“In the Service of Shadows: The Making of El Norte is a very complete 58 ½-minute discussion about making the movie featuring director Nava, producer Anna Thomas, set designer David Wasco, and stars Zaide Silvia Gutierrez and David Villalpando. Among the topics discussed include the writing of the script, securing the financing for the film, casting the movie, choosing locations for filming, and production problems and their solutions. The documentary is presented in anamorphic widescreen.

“Scouting in Chiapas” is a series of twenty-four photographs showing various locations in southern Mexico where portions of the film were shot.

The Journal of Diego Rodriguez Silva is director Nava’s 1972 award-winning student short film presented here in its 30-minute, 4:3, black and white entirety. The film is very similar to the tone and texture of El Norte. The viewer can choose to play it with or without the director’s 3-minute introduction.

The original theatrical trailer is presented full frame and runs for 1 ½ minutes.

The enclosed 15-page booklet contains a couple of color stills, a deep appreciation of the film by author Héctor Tobar, and Roger Ebert’s original review of the film.


In Conclusion

5/5 (not an average)

A haunting, memorable film, El Norte is another Criterion Collection winner that comes highly recommended. With a dazzling transfer, crisp audio, and interesting extras, the film has a DVD release worthy of its greatness.


Matt Hough
Charlotte, NC
 

Richard--W

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Thanks for drawing attention to this absorbing human interest drama and important, very relevant film. It's also a foreign film, but a foreign film made mostly in the USA. Nava's perspective makes us perceive our own country differently. The circumstances depicted in the film are a soft version of how things are now. The act of crossing the border illegally into the USA has turned into a regular war now, with immigrant camps and predators of all kinds on the Mexican side. Very little of the violence and suffering and injustice are ever reported. It's an ongoing horror story that grows more intense with each passing day.

Criterion is also releasing the film on BD.

Nava's latest film:

http://www.amazon.com/Bordertown-Jua...1985163&sr=8-2
 

Brent Avery

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Feb 19, 2002
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I was thinking of purchasing this eventually - and since the Blu ray version is the same price as the SD dvd I know which one I will purchase.
 

Matt Hough

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Yes, I reviewed the Blu-ray version a couple of weeks ago. Odd that in the cases of both BOTTLE ROCKET and EL NORTE, Criterion sent the Blu-rays long before I received the standard DVDs.
 

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