A story about raising young children in an Argentinian prison. |
Pablo Trapero’s fourth film is not your standard movie about
motherhood and the strong links between a mother and her child mainly because
the mothers and children involved in Lions Den (2008) are behind bars[1]
The film is about a middle class student called Julia who gives birth to her
son Thomas in jail while awaiting trial for allegedly murdering her boyfriend
and stabbing his male lover. Julia’s life in prison bringing up her child is
shown in detail and demonstrates the difference between the rather nervous
unsure pregnant student lost in the general unease of the prison system and the
change in her demeanour after she becomes a mother, developing a powerful
survival instinct.
Unfortunately this film had a limited release in the UK in
2010 from a director who has since became very well known for Carancho
(2012) which was selected as the Argentine entry for the Best Foreign
Language Film at the 83rd Academy Awards but eventually lost out to the
Danish drama/thriller In a
Better World (2010). Lions Den
again stars Trapero’s wife the 31 year-old Martina Gusman who is also the
Executive Producer. Actually filmed in maximum-security prisons including Buenos
Aires Batan Penitentiary and using prison guards and inmates as extras this,
and the research within the prison system that the husband and wife pair carried
out, really pay’s of giving the film a socially realistic documentary style.
Martina Gusman with her on screen child Thomas. |
Martina Gusman appears in every scene and certainly gives a convincing
performance highlighting what she has called the ‘forgotten issue’, that is to
say the stress and pressure put on women bring up their children inside prison.
Her portrayal also ensures that you will find this film very moving and will
not have any qualms about empathising with the mothers no matter what their
crimes, children are the most precious commodity there is and should be treated
as such. Both director and leading actress, who obviously care about their
subject, have argued publically for a different system to be introduced for
mothers with very young children. Yes, to an extent the movie is a political
stage but one that’s well disserved. Although this is an affecting film it is
also very enjoyable and at times quite humorous.
No place to raise children. |
Regarding his approach to filmmaking Trapero says that he try’s
to tell stories that can give you a different view of life, that can touch or
move you indifferent ways. He likes to be close to the characters, not just
following a story and observing. He also says that he likes bringing to the
screen the sense that you are sharing a part of your life with a fictional
character, and in the three films I have seen from this very talented
Argentinian director he more than succeeds.
[1] In ARGENTINA,
female convicts can keep their children with them in prison until the child
reaches the age of four. This can create an atmosphere conducive to child abuse
and neglect. In many developing nations, inmates depend on family members to
provide them with food, clothing and special medical care. Inmates whose
families are not able to supply the basic necessities, or who have been
abandoned by their families, often wear rags and eat only what they are able to
beg from other inmates.
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