MightyGanesha.com
TheDivaReview.com
 









|

Brave,
I tell ya. Say what you want about Jennifer Lopez - and I know you will
- but you can’t deny the girl’s got stones. I could fill this entire
review encompassing the miles of gossip that has swirled around Castle
Hill’s most famous resident. I could scribble for hours musing on the
low expectations predicating the release of El Cantante, most relevant
being the ghosts of Gigli rattling around refusing to go into the light.
Starring in an excruciatingly terrible vanity production with her
current significant other might not have been her best career move, but
damme if J-to-tha-L-O didn’t get right back on the horse and do it
again!
I would like to say
that the one of the many differences between Gigli and El Cantante is
the fact that it’s not a vanity production. During an interview I
conducted with Lopez, she said she first came across the El Cantante
script five years ago and had been trying to get the film made ever
since. This movie was clearly a passion for her. More’s the pity one of
the biggest flaws of the film is her inclusion into nearly every scene
in the film, turning El Cantante, allegedly the biography of Puerto
Rican Salsa god, Hector Lavoe, into a Jennifer Lopez vehicle.
The early scenes start
off promisingly enough with young Hector singing with his father, a
well-known orchestra guitarist in Puerto Rico. Against dad’s wishes and
warnings, Hector decides to come to New York, where the wide-eyed jibaro
(- country hick) immediately gets caught up in the thriving and
progressive Puerto Rican music scene. Hector’s remarkable talents are
immediately snatched up for the Fania music label and matched with New
York-born Puerto Rican, Willie Colon, together mixing their love of
classic Latin rhythms, jazz rock and R&B, the two lay the foundations
for the new style of Latin music that will sweep the world for decades.
Along the way, playing
the clubs of New York, Hector runs into a hot piece of goods named Puchi
(- nee Nilda), a tough, no-nonsense Bronx girl… hm…tough,
no-nonsense girl from the Bronx… Why is that familiar? Almost
immediately, Hector and Puchi are inseparable, and as Hector’s fortunes
rise, they glory in the good life together. Sadly, if this was merely a
story of Hector’s success, there would probably be no movie about him.
It isn’t long before Hector’s long months of touring with Willie Colon
and the Fania family take their toll and Hector picks up a few nasty
habits along the way; not the least being his frequent tendency to stick
needles full of narcotics into his veins. Once the smack is introduced,
everything suffers, his relationship with Willie Colon, his relationship
with his fans – both of whom are constantly let down by Hector’s
unreliability and concert no shows, and his relationship with Puchi –
which is portrayed here as a very odd thing indeed. There is never a
pretense of fidelity with Hector and Puchi either before (- another
Hector girlfriend gives birth around the same time Puchi does) or
after their darkly hilarious wedding – Puchi literally drags a
drug-addled Hector up the aisle. Hector’s fortunes allow Puchi to
indulge in her own love of cocaine, and Puchi can never be accused of
spearheading the crusade to get her man the help he desperately needed –
heck, she’s shown giving Hector his first joint. One very telling moment
shows us Puchi lounging backstage at yet another concert where Hector
has failed to show up. In their frustration at Puchi’s harangues,
Hector’s tour manager asks anyone who’ll listen “Why is she here? Why
isn’t she with Hector?” Fair point. Though El Cantante tries to do
double duty as a sort of love story, the relationship between Hector and
Puchi is symbiotic to and past the point of mutual self-destruction and
borders on the edge of creepy.
Herein lies the fly in
the proverbial ointment, director Leon Ichaso’s choice to make Puchi as
central to the story as Hector is. The entire film is told from Puchi’s
point of view; she serves as narrator in black and white inserts
throughout the film dated in 2002 (- don’t get me started on the
ridiculous aging make-up). Apart from those few moments before they
met, and a few seconds away on tour, you never see Hector without Puchi
and it doesn’t take very long before Puchi’s repellant tough-as-nails
abrasiveness loses its novelty and just rides your last nerve. I
couldn't help wishing she would just go away and I sat there wondering
if Hector didn’t wish it, too, but there she is in scene after scene, at
times dancing on the very stage where Hector and the Fania All-Stars are
performing as if she were part of the act. (- I understand that the
reality was Puchi would dance in the wings at many concerts, but the
effect for those who aren’t aware just looks like JLo is just hogging up
screen time and reliving her Fly Girl days) Later, after Hector is
inexorably driven to Creedmoor Sanitarium, Puchi finally visits him
after many days away, painted to the gills, bling up the wazoo and
enough dead animals draped over her to fill up a pet cemetery. Hector’s
sister seizes the moment to tell Puchi that she was exactly the reason
why their father never wanted Hector to come to New York. She’s asked by
her interviewers if she actually wanted Hector to get well, to which she
has no answer. La Lopez’s Puchi comes off as a shrill harpy and had
there been less of her, there would’ve been much more of the film to
like.
But there’s some
really good stuff here, folks, namely the music. At those precious
moments when El Cantante focuses on Hector as an artist, a crowd-pleaser
and the “Singer of singers”, as he’s later known, the film is glorious.
The concert sequences are bright, vibrant and alive. For those who are
familiar with the music, the cinematography will bring them to a new
appreciation by placing them right on stage with Hector; experiencing
the excitement those live shows were known for. The scenes throb and
thump with the vitality of the salsa music that Hector helped create.
For the members of the audience who’ve been sadly deprived of this art
form; El Cantante is a great primer, giving us some of the most famous
of Lavoe’s songs and infusing them with the life and joy of having them
sung excellently by Marc Anthony.
I’m afraid that in all
the static surrounding this film, notice for Marc Anthony’s wonderful
performance as Hector Lavoe will be lost. Marc manages to infuse Hector
with the humanity, humour and charm that made one understand why
“everybody forgave his faults”, as Puchi says in one interview scene.
Marc Anthony’s Hector is an easy-going, laid back country boy who only
shows real strength and backbone when either on stage or on drugs. As it
becomes clear that Hector simply has no one close to him to put him off
his self-destructive course, you wonder if he was truly “put here to
suffer” as it’s said in the film (- and Marc Anthony related in our
interview). There don’t seem to be enough stages for him to play on
to keep him away from Puchi, the drugs or any other distractions and you
can’t help but wonder what might’ve been, and there is the heartbreak
that makes his story so compelling.
It’s not all bad,
kids, and that’s the bottom line. If you can make it through the
annoyance of Jennifer Lopez’s character you’ll be all right. Focus on
the fantastic music, the beautiful camerawork (- which should be
appropriated to promote tourism to Puerto Rico), the occasional
funny moments (- intentional or not), and the wonderful
performance by Marc Anthony. In answer to the question on many minds, in
those precious few minutes when Puchi’s not making Hector’s life (-and
ours) hell, Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony do actually exhibit real
chemistry on screen. El Cantante is not a perfect film by any means, but
I think it goes a long way to introduce and pay respects to a man of
great talent and tragedy known by so many and so few.
~ Mighty Ganesha
July 28th, 2007
© 2006-2008
MightyGanesha.com |
Photos
(Courtesy of
Picturehouse)
|