You can't fault John Sayles for being earnest. Actually, you can. After the
subtlety, restraint, and narrative intelligence of his last film, Lone
Star, he has returned in Men with Guns to the thuddingly obvious
political allegory and kneejerk sentiments that distinguished City of
Hope -- it's the kind of pompous political correctness that's the downfall
of liberal sensibilities in cinema. As formulaic as a high-school play, its
ingenuous ideology betrayed by its fuzzy edge and penchant for easy targets,
Guns is loaded with blanks.
Set in an imaginary Latin American country, the film relates the moral odyssey
of Dr. Fuentes (the excellent Argentine actor Federico Luppi, here resembling
Leslie Nielsen), a naive, idealistic physician (his cluelessness about the
political realities surrounding him are underscored during a proctology exam he
conducts on an army general) whose life seems void since his wife died. To
restore his sense of purpose, he decides to visit a number of young doctors he
trained to treat impoverished Indians in remote villages. One by one, he
discovers that each of his wards has been murdered by government troops engaged
in brutal repression.
Along the way he encounters some iconic wanderers: Domingo (Damián
Delgado), "the soldier," a desperate deserter compromised by war crimes; Conejo
(Dan Rivera González), "the boy," who embodies the carefree innocence
that endures; Padre Portillo (Damián Alcázar), "the priest," a
disgraced cleric compromised by cowardice, and Graciela (Tania Cruz), "the mute
girl," a rape victim whose plight cries out for vindication. Complementing
these by-the-numbers stereotypes are the cognomens of the various villagers
Fuentes encounters ("the salt people," "the banana people," and so on),
Sayles's bludgeoning way of showing how in a capitalist tyranny, people are
dehumanized into the means of production.
It might have helped Sayles's case had he specified an actual country and
political situation -- say, Mexico (where the film was shot) and the turmoil in
the Chiapas region. As it is, Men with Guns hits the mark only with the
recurrent appearances of Mandy Patinkin and Kathryn Grody as crass American
tourists. In this venture into Third World strife and injustice, Sayles comes
off as a bit of a tourist himself.
--Peter Keough
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