Distressingly believable historical, a multi award-winner from director Lucrecia Martel on early colonial attempts at commercial trade & development in northern Argentina (late 18th century). It’s where Don Diego de Zama (Daniel Giménez Cacho) is stationed and where he has grievously erred thru hard work, loyalty to the Crown and near competency. With such a positive record, why should his superiors let this magistrate transfer to a better post or Buenos Aires? He believes he’s earned that reward by honest labor (he has a family he’s not seen in years) compared to the drunks, thieves & slackers around him. Impossible to get anything accomplished in the face of men drifting toward savagery, disease & madness; or dying mid-lunch by an acute attack of the plague. Zama hardly immune, having acquired a mistress and mixed-race son. And more obstacles, like a rural legend with a gang of deserters & discontents, one Vicuña Porto, regularly reported dead or attacking in some new place. A man Zama will be ordered to track down, discover he has something in common with, then pay a price when Porto faces near mutiny by his superstitious men convinced that gemstones can be found inside coconuts from a certain grove. And Porto needs to pressure Zama on their location. Martel’s dogged realism does little to make this more palatable, it’s a drudge at times, but never without interest in its depiction of depravity and man’s infinite capacity for self-deception and illogical hope.
DOUBLE-BILL: Werner Herzog’s AGUIRRE, THE WRATH OF GOD/’72 set the standard for this kind of collective madness among early colonizers, though the film has lost the classroom caché or art-house following it once had.
ATTENTION MUST BE PAID: Paid by D.P. Rui Poças who cuts off more heads than anyone on screen with tight framing, as if he thought they were releasing in Academy Ratio (1.37:1) not standard ‘flat’ (1.85:1). Or was it meant for some in-between frame? (Say, 1.66:1; often seen in Europe.)










