Tony Gatlif makes movies for people who recognize that the essence of storytelling
is enchantment. It's an easy point to forget, what with all these social anthropologists
and French literary critics around trying to put a utilitarian or theoretical spin
on a primordial human impulse. But Gatlif, a son of Spanish gypsies, is one of those
rare, instinctive artists who seems wholly motivated by the desire to envelope viewers
in his sense of intoxication with the world's beauty and mystery. Like his two previous
American releases, Latcho Drom (1993) and Mondo (1996), Gadjo Dilo illuminates the
little-understood culture of European gypsies. The main storyline concerns a scruffy-handsome
young Frenchman named Stéphane (Duris) who's trekking the Balkans in search
of a singer he only knows as a haunting voice on an old homemade cassette. Somewhere
in Romania, the winter cold forces Stéphane to take shelter in a ramshackle
gypsy village. There, he's warily regarded as a "gadjo dilo" (crazy outsider) who
needs to be watched like a hawk lest he skip town with a sackful of stolen chickens.
Plot happens, in a fitful, harum-scarum way, but it really doesn't seem to be the
point. Instead, what Gatlif is asking us to consider (or, rather, feel) is Stéphane's
reaction to the exotic, marginalized society he's been thrust into. As it turns out,
Stéphane's questing heart has room enough for the ritualized craziness of gypsy
life. Within weeks, he's perfectly integrated into a social milieu in which ordinary
conversations include shouts of "eat the hairs of my cock!" and where plate-smashing
and dry-humping are traditional dance-floor moves. Gadjo Dilo is a full immersion
into a wild, flamboyant, and electrifyingly sexy culture that should revitalize the
libidos of most American viewers -- at least those who aren't put off by all the emotional
overkill which, admittedly, verges often on Monty Python territory. Other noteworthy
features are Gatlif's distinctive visual style, which combines documentary realism
with dreamlike images that add emotional punch to key scenes, and the deeply affecting
performances of both Duris and Hartner, who plays Stéphane's volcanic gypsy
lover. (The image of Hartner rubbing her hair and body with wildflowers as she stands
in steaming bath water earns instant induction into my annual compendium of yowza!
cinema moments.) Gadjo Dilo's concluding scenes unexpectedly transform the lighthearted
story into a grim fable illustrating how the very same passions that enrich Balkan
cultures also account for their ghastly history of senseless war and "ethnic cleansing."
For Gatlif, the loving chronicler of his native culture, this is an admirably candid
act of introspection that only deepens my appreciation of his powerful body of work.
--Russell Smith
Capsule Reviews
Gadjo Dilo 
Other Films by Tony Gatlif
Mondo 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Taste of Cherry 
Man With a Movie Camera 
The Thief 
Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by Tony Gatlif at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com
Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how
others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the
Cast Vote button.
|