One of the most original filmmakers working today, John Sayles never takes the easy
way out when he can take a more interesting -- if convoluted -- one. From Matewan to
City of Hope to the brilliant Lone Star, Sayles has proven himself time and again
a master of story, structure, character, and conflict, and this new addition to Saylesiana
is no different. Alright, I take that back -- Men With Guns is different, in its use
of magical realism, repeated flashbacks, and the fact that it's almost entirely in
Spanish, but it's still very much a John Sayles film, from its frequent use of deeply
layered symbolism to its lush photography and deep, abiding emotional core. Luppi
(perhaps best known as the old man in Cronos) plays Humberto Fuentes, an aging physician
in a large, unnamed Latin American city who is approaching retirement. Some time
before, he trained a group of young doctors as part of an international program to
provide care to the poor and disenfranchised who reside deep within the heart of
the jungles and the tiny, economically ravaged communities that dot the southern
landscape. When he runs into one of his former students -- now supplying drugs to
the city's youth -- he decides to embark on a cross-country quest to discover what
happened to his former charges. Despite the protestations of friends and family,
he sets out to Rio Seco to find his first contact, Cienfuegos. Once there, he is
told by an old peasant woman that the doctor was killed by "men with guns." Who are
these men, why are they carrying guns, and, more important, why do they seem to control
the whole landscape into which Dr. Fuentes has ventured? No one he encounters seems
to have an answer that fits the question, though these men with guns appear to be
everywhere, and as his trip wears on, Dr. Fuentes realizes that his students may
all be dead. Along the way, he hooks up with an engaging street urchin, Conejo (Gonzalez),
a broken priest (Alcazar), a hot-tempered ex-soldier who at first steals his tires
and then acts as a guide (Delgado), and finally a young mute girl who has been raped
by the men with guns. Sayles fashions a journey of exploration through the impenetrable
jungle in search of truth, but comes up with a symbolic indictment of Men With Guns
everywhere: the soldiers, the usurpers, the madmen who rule not only this unnamed
province of the mind but also the real world. Sayles is calling into question everything
from politics to religion here, and though some of the symbolism is obscure (not
to mention the magical realism), it's a deeply moving, deeply personal film. Luppi
is gripping as the fading healer, and the brilliant cinematography by Slawomir Idziak
(Blue and more recently Gattaca) is wrenching in its lush, fuming beauty. Marred
at times by occasional stretches in which the forward momentum of the story wanders
off course to inspect the jungle and such, Men With Guns is still a powerful, riveting
film, packed with subtle discourse and brimming with passion.
3.0 stars
--Marc Savlov
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Other Films by John Sayles
Limbo 
Lone Star 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Red Corner 
Animal Farm 
Chocolate Babies 
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