Central
Station Movie Review:
Dora
is a cynical woman, her moral nerves and compassion having
burnt out a long time ago. People of her kind populate big
spooky old houses in neighbourhoods, giving generations
of children endless inspiration for witch stories and bogeymen.
In cash-strapped Brazil (films from such countries always
manages to soak their fabric with the general poverty of
their environment), she supplements her living by writing
letters for a generally illiterate population, at her spot
in Rio de Janeiro's central station.
Not
that she actually posts the letters. Dora takes bitter delight
in deciding what is worthy enough to be delivered and what
gets torn up and thrown into garbage. She mocks the hopes
and dreams on the paper, confirming her conviction that
humanity is made up of stupid and useless people. She shares
the letters' contents like gossip with her neighbour Irene,
who generally disapproves of her practise but cannot resist
the temptation of voyeurism into other people's lives. And
among those letters, is one written for Ana and her young
son Josué, who wants to see his estranged father.
However, a sudden accident sets young Josué adrift
in the world, who decides to seek out his father on his
own. Almost against her own will, Dora accompanies the nine-year-old,
and discovers to her shock the stirrings of humanity that
she thought she had divested a long time ago. Together they
travel to remote northeast Brazil, in what looks and feels
like the end of the world.
Call
it a road movie if you like - not surprisingly, it's a journey
both of the body and the mind. But it's a movie that uses
that concept as a vehicle to explore other ideas, such as
faith. Actually, I've never noticed it before, but faith
of all kinds populate this film - especially that of the
religious kind. At one point in the movie, Dora and Josué
hitch a ride on a truck carrying white-garbed religious
pilgrims, whose presence amuses Dora's cynicism but at the
same time unsettles her. Though Dora has a crucifix in her
apartment, it seems more like a decoration rather than anything
religious. But her contact with Josué changes her
- his naiveté and his fierce determination inspires
her. Although she grumbles and rails against the young boy's
convictions, and tries her best to educate the boy in the
ways of the "real" world with all its pitfalls
and traps, she herself begins to find regain her faith in
people and herself. The recovery of her humanity gives her
hurt (in one scene where she opens her heart), but having
found hope again, she entreats Josué and also herself
never to forget.
The
cinematography and scenes successfully brings to life the
Catholicism and poverty that permeates the fabric of this
film. In countries where a massive percentage of the population
are in poverty, and help from secular authority is patchy
at best, religion provides the only comfort for many. I
also always feel somewhat sweaty after watching South American
films, since given the climate, no one escapes the day without
a shirt sticking to their sweaty backs - I don't think I
even saw anyone taking a bath either in this film. The performances
are excellent, with Vinícius de Oliveira bringing
to life the cheeky bravado of young Josué who charms
and exasperates Dora, herself played with crusty perfection
by Fernanda Montenegro. Rather than portraying an adult-child
relationship, theirs is more like a friendship of equals,
where they cuss, argue and console each other as friends
would. Josué is almost like a Christ-child, the analogy
of him teaching salvation and hope to Dora, a lost soul,
and his father being a carpenter and his brothers possessing
Biblical names. It's a sentimental journey, but done with
such gusto and strength that celebrates life and humanity
to touch the cynical heart.
Eden
Law
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