Thursday 28 June 2012

Review No.117: Casa Di Me Padre



I always think it must be hard for English-speaking actors to star in a film were they have to speak in an entirely different language for example Kristen Scott Thomas who was utterly convincing as a Frenchwoman in brilliant films such as I've Loved You So Long and Leaving. This year Will Ferrell has also had a go at it by donning a Spanish accent to play a Mexican ranch hand in supposed comedy Casa Di Me Padre. Ferrell's Armando Alvarez lives works on his father's ranch but is a constant disappointment to him because, as we found out later in the film, he shot and killed his own mother after trying to defend her from bandits. Armando is worried that drug dealers are taking over the land he loves and killing off fellow citizens but as he is a weak man he can do nothing about it. Armando's brother Raul, played by Diego Luna, returns to the ranch with a new girlfriend Sonia who is actually the niece of Gael Garcia Bernal's drug lord El Onzo. Raul is the apple of his father's eye but Armando is shocked to discover that his brother is also a drug dealer and that's why he can afford to buy his future wife expensive items. Sonia though is drawn to Armando who is much more of a romantic than Raul but as she wants to stay loyal to her current beau she is torn between the two brothers. With rival drug lords in the area it's only a matter of time before a showdown occurs which also features crooked cops one of whom has a connection to the boys' mother but will they be able to save the day?

I will start by saying that I'm normally a big fan of Ferrell's in particular I love the films were he doesn't play it broad such as Stranger than Fiction or the recent Everything Must Go. In Casa De Mi Padre the central joke seems to be that the former Ron Burgundy is speaking Spanish however that wears thin fairly quickly. Former Y Tu Mama Tambien brethren Luna and Bernal both seem to be having a hoot as the drug dealers, with the latter playing a similar part in Contraband, but again there's not much humour to be had in the shoot-out. For me the funniest moments come when director Matt Piedmont is keen to point out that the film was supposedly shot on a small budget with very dodgy edits happening throughout. My favourite moment was possibly when the action stopped for one of the assistant cameramen to inform us that they did shoot a fight between two big cats however it got too violent as both got into the cocaine supply and ended up killing several crew members. For me though, while I smiled several times, I never once burst out laughing which for me is unusual during a film with Ferrell on stage. The exterior settings do add a certain authenticity to proceedings and all the cast did a good job but at the end of the day I felt Casa Di Me Padre was a little flat despite Ferrell's very convincing Spanish accent.

Verdict: A couple of good in-jokes about the overall production and Bernal and Luna's big performances stopped this from being a complete dud but because it felt fairly flat I can only give it 5/10

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