REEL CRITICS
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‘Tortilla Soup’ pleases the palate
One of life’s terrible ironies is that bad movies are easy to write
about; brilliant movies make me very self-conscious. So here it goes
(deep breath). . . . With grainy, slightly overexposed cinematography and
natural performances, “Tortilla Soup” (directed by Maria Ripoll) captures
the everyday magic of a Mexican American family whose ties are strained
by change. Martin Naranjo (Hector Elizondo) is a widowed master chef who
has lost his sense of taste and smell. Every Sunday, he and his daughters
sit at the dinner table to eat dishes he creates from memory.
The oldest daughter, Leticia (Elizabeth Pena), is confused by the lust
and horror of receiving poetic missives from a secret admirer. Meanwhile,
daughter Carmen (Jacqueline Obradors) is caught in the struggle of
wanting to follow her dream of becoming a master chef or advancing her
corporate career. The youngest, Maribel (Tamara Mello), seeks to find her
place in the family and in the world. On top of all this, Martin also
contends with the flamboyant attentions of a nosy divorcee played by
Raquel Welch.
“Tortilla Soup” gets its soul from the cast. With the exception of a
vividly funny Welch, these actors often perform minor roles in bigger
movies. Elizondo is a magnetic, authoritative personality who in the end
delivers a shocking twist. Pena’s performance puts her in a class far
above most actresses whose salaries outweigh their talent.
Paul Rodriguez punctuates his scenes with goofy humor, while Obradors
and Mello are graceful, but smart, new screen presences.
Although based on Ang Lee’s “Eat Drink Man Woman,” “Tortilla Soup”
(directed by Maria Ripoll) is a standout addition to Mexican American
cinema. It’s an opportunity to eavesdrop on the Naranjo family, and you
leave the theater with a sense of a movie well savored.
o7 “Tortilla Soup” is rated PG-13 for sexual content.
f7 * MARY A. CASTILLO, 27, is a Costa Mesa resident.
‘Ghosts of Mars’: So bad it’s scary
It is sad for me to admit, but it appears that John Carpenter’s days
of glory may be long gone. I can hardly believe that the same director
who created the horror masterpiece “Halloween” and the campy cult classic
“Big Trouble in Little China” was responsible for the cinematic mess that
I witnessed on the silver screen Saturday.
Gone is the nail-biting suspense and creepy atmosphere of “Halloween”
and “The Fog.” Gone is the wacky humor of “Big Trouble in Little China.”
All that is left in “Ghosts of Mars” is a bad script, corny acting and
gratuitous violence.
“Ghosts of Mars” is a sci-fi thriller that borrows heavily from such
films as “Night of the Living Dead,””Aliens” and Carpenter’s own “Assault
on Precinct 13,” in which a group of people are under siege and must
learn to work together to survive.
Natasha Henstridge (“Species”) plays Lt. Melanie Ballard, who is part
of a small band of space cops sent to transport a dangerous prisoner
named James “Desolation” Williams, played by actor/rapper Ice Cube, from
a Martian colony. When Ballard’s group reaches the colony where Williams
is being held, via a futuristic train that looks like it is part of a
kid’s toy set, they discover that all of the colonists are either dead or
missing.
They soon learn that the missing colonists are possessed by Martian
ghosts and now look like rejects from a KISS or Marilyn Manson concert.
Only a small group of prisoners, including Williams, have managed to
avoid possession. Ballard’s group and the prisoners must then find a way
to survive until the toy train comes back to pick them up. Yep, folks,
that’s all there is to this highly unoriginal plot.
The story is told through annoying flashback sequences that left me
with the feeling of deja vu as scenes were repeated over and over again.
I can only assume that Carpenter did this for fear that he would lose his
audience during the disjointed telling of this cliched tale.
It also seems that Carpenter did not want to take any chances with a
developed plot or a back-story, as those too might only confuse the
audience. This movie should have made a short stop at video before
continuing on to film oblivion. Riding a kid’s toy train set no less!
o7 “Ghosts of Mars” is rated R for strong violence/gore, language and
some drug content.
f7
* RYAN GILMORE, 27, is a Costa Mesa resident.
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