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| ALAMBRISTA!
(THE ILLEGAL) (director/writer:
Robert M. Young; cinematographers: Robert M.
Young/Tom Hurwitz/Robert
M. Young; editor: Edward Beyer; music: Michael Martin Murphey;
cast: Domingo
Ambriz (Roberto), Trinidad Silva (Joe),
Linda Gillen (Sharon),
Ned Beatty (Anglo
Coyote), Ludevina Mendez Salazar (Roberto's Wife), Maria
Guadalupe Chavez (Roberto's Mother); Runtime: 110; MPAA
Rating: NR; producer: Michael Hausman/ Irwin W. Young; Criterion Collection, The;
1977) "A worthy social drama on the heartbreaking hardships of being a Mexican illegal in the States." Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz The
low-budget drama was made for public television. It's
the feature film directorial debut of Robert M. Young
("The Eskimo: Fight for Life"/"Saving Grace"/"Dominick
and Eugene"), who also functions as
writer and cinematographer.
It's a worthy social drama on the heartbreaking
hardships of being a Mexican illegal in the States,
but fails to show enough righteous anger at the
politicians who permit this intolerable system of
immigration to still exist even in 2012. It's based on
Young's experience of living a year in the 1970s with
Mexican
wet-backs in the US Southwest, which makes the film seem
authentic. The sub-human conditions recorded for the
living conditions of the illegals is old hat, but
still is insightful for those not fully aware of how
the illegal is exploited in America. But even though
the sensitive characterizations of the illegals is
welcomed and gives Americans an accurate look at how
perverted its immigration policy is, the film is too
bland and filled with too many stereotypical
depictions of the illegals to get one too excited. It won the Camera d'Or at
the 1978 Cannes Film Festival and unfairly became
forgotten. Roberto Ramirez (Domingo
Ambriz) is a young married field hand in a rural area
of Michoacán,
Mexico, whose
wife just gave birth to a daughter. Afraid he can't
support his family, Roberto goes north, crossing the
border to California, where the non-English-speaking illegal hopes to make
enough money in a year to return to support his
family. Of note, his mom reminds him that his father
went north and mysteriously never returned. After
eluding an immigration police raid while he works at picking fruit, Roberto hooks up with
Mexican colleagues to survive and lives in a chicken
coop. Joe (Trinidad
Silva) acts as
the innocent Roberto's mentor and teaches him how to
smile for the gringos and order coffee, ham and eggs
for breakfast. The illegal Roberto and Joe
become sidekicks and ride a freight to Stockton, but
get separated. When the exhausted fruit picker with no
place to live, Roberto, falls asleep in the
luncheonette, near Stockton, the sweet waitress gringo
single-mom Sharon (Linda Gillen) feels sorry for him and takes him home. They
become lovers and Sharon teaches him English, how to
send a money order home, and takes the
fish-out-of-water to an evangelist Sunday revival meeting and, he
goes for the first time, to a department store. But
just as quickly as they met, they depart when he's
troubled by the immigration police and has become
homesick. The two will not even have a chance to say
goodbye to each other, as they separate for good. The earnest muckraking film lets us know that the illegal can always expect the worse in America; and, even though he does the unwanted labor most people in America refuse to do, he's still never respected for that. The illegals fate in America is to always be on the run from the police and be made aware from others that he's an outsider who is unwelcome in the States by most. REVIEWED ON 5/13/2012 GRADE: B Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |