“What’s it like, True Detective in Spain?” – Sarah Leech, digital content producer
This is a quote from a colleague of mine who, when I told her I’d watched Marshland
the night before, asked me what it was like. I swear to you, that was
the very tagline I’d created in my head about half an hour in. Even
Wikipedia references the comparisons in an online article for HoyCinema.
Great minds and all that.
And while it’s no detriment to the Goya-winning
police procedural to be compared to such a series (the first one, at
least), there’s a somewhat pedestrian air to said police proceedings
that casts a long, frowning shadow over its relatively brisk 106
minutes.
The story is fine, the acting is fine, the visuals are fine – special
mention going to several knockout aerial shots of brief criminal
encounters and sun-parched crime scenes. These alone could justify the
entrance fee, but only really if the film was a feature-length version
of Andrew Marr’s Britain From Above.
Which it isn’t. It’s a perfectly serviceable crime thriller, with
plenty of character ambiguity and serious faces to tick all the relevant
boxes. It’s such a shame it doesn’t do more than it says on the tin.
Suárez (Raúl Arévalo) and Robles (Javier Gutiérrez)
are two cops in Spain, circa 1980 – one young and grizzled, the other
slightly older (and slightly more grizzled). Packed off almost
immediately after the credits roll to investigate the murder of two
teenage girls in the backwater locale of the Guadalquivir Marshes (hence
the title), it soon becomes apparent that there’s more to this crime
than the townsfolk are letting on. Add to that the rather abrasive
methods Robles uses on his suspects – murky deals made with individuals
who may have something to gain from the investigation – and an all-round
sense that no-one wants to quite tell the truth no matter which side
they’re on, and you have a soup-thick plot which could give Broadchurch a run for its money.
However, unlike Broadchurch,
there’s very little page-turning tension to be chewed on. There’s
nothing wrong with the ingredients, but the resulting meal never fully
satisfies. Let me be contentious: if this film had been released as an
English language American production, you can bet it wouldn’t have
received half the plaudits. It’s a solid three-starrer, nothing more.
With that in mind, I do feel there’s a bigger discussion to be had
around the idea that a film being ‘foreign’ (excuse the colloquialism)
automatically grants it a free pass to be given more credit and kudos
than its English language counterparts. Case in point being
Schwarzenegger’s latest outing, Maggie.
It’s not bad, the script and style suitably muted in tone, a zombie
film with an emotional pulse. And yes, even the acting isn’t terrible,
Schwarzenegger making a half-decent fist of ‘real’ emotions; he fairs no
worse than any other Austrian former
bodybuilder-turned-actor-turned-State Governor. It’s ‘alright’. But were
it to have been Korean/French/Guatemalan? I fear the red carpet may
have been rolled out.
Food for thought? Maybe, maybe not. Watch this space – I’ll be back. (to argue my case a little better, that is.)
First published on Northern Soul, Aug 8th 2015
No comments:
Post a Comment