Film: "The Debt"April 30, 2002 at 710 p.m.

Time: April 30, 2002 at 710 p.m.
Location:Crossroads
Audience:Public
Category:General
Attendancenone
Cost$0.00
Description
From IMDB.COM The fabulous and colorful cinematography (Juan Cristobal Cobo) is the most outstanding about this fairy-tale about illusions in the form of magic realism. Almost expressionist angles, shadows and colors make it a banquet for the eye. La Deuda does need music to make up for the scarce plot flaws and shaky acting, but thatscore (Luis Bacalov) is great. If music can be ironic and humorous, that's what it is here. The whole comes across as a comedy, but actually it is a farce (or several farces interwoven) in which a usurer dies and people are relieved from their debt, until the usurer seems to come back. Or is it only the debtors' superstition that raises him from death? Anyway, children and fools seem to tell the truth in this story: adults make up their own truth. People try to wash their hands in innocence, but if everybody has a debt to someone then there is still one guy who holds the IOU's. Wasn't that also a story-element in Fight Club, where credit-card company buildings had to be blown up to clear everybody's liabilities? So if that last character disappeared, then everybody else would be relieved of their liabilities. But then nobody would be innocent. Everybody in this story tries to cover their own hypocrisy and tries to liquidate their debt. What kind of debt they have is to be seen. This kind of fairy-tale (farce) could only occur in a small community without disturbing factors from outside who can provide solutions. They have to solve their problems and cope with their conscience, superstition and greed. Or it is just a religious allegory about sin and remission ... neh. Sponsored by: Center for the Vocational Reflection, Lecture series, Latin American, Latino and Caribbean Studies, Modern Foreign Languages, Crossroads, Diversity, Communication, Chaplains Office, and Student Senate.