Canadian filmmaker Nettie Wild wears her biases on her sleeve. Providing her
own voiceover narration of her five-month expedition to the troubled southern
Mexican state of Chiapas, she sometimes comes off as a First World romantic
revolutionary voyeur. "In Canada, we debated the North American Free Trade
Agreement -- in Mexico they went to war over it." And she jacks up the drama
with a spooky, evocative soundtrack score and theatrical editing. Sometimes she
seems gullible, sometimes merely unclear (the complicated issues get a cursory
explanation). But she's brave and relentless, and revealing in spite of
herself. The romance of black-ski-masked armed revolutionaries on horseback and
their mysterious city-bred leader, Marcos, gives way to the everyday realities
of an impoverished Mayan Indian population living in near-ungovernable chaos,
and the contending forces of Zapatistas, the paramilitary right-wing Peace and
Justice group, and federal troops. The film is exquisitely shot and edited, and
in the end you come to trust both the tale and the teller.
--Jon Garelick
Interviews
A Place Called Chiapas 
Capsule Reviews
A Place Called Chiapas 
Film Vault Suggested Links
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