Used Parts (2007) Poster

(2007)

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8/10
A great Mexican film
KobusAdAstra30 July 2020
Iván, a 14-year old boy lives with his uncle Jaime in Mexico. Both dream about moving to the US. They plan to illegally move there and are seriously saving money for the journey. They specialize in buying stolen cars, strip them and sell the spare parts. They realize that they will have to increase their income because their people smuggler wants to leave for the US in three weeks. The two expand their business by stripping parked cars of wheels, rims and mirrors. The boy starts to involve a young friend to help. Then his uncle's girlfriend mentions that she wants to move with them to the US too. The uncle tells his nephew that first he and his girl will move to the US and send money so that the boy can join them later. This is not what they agreed upon and Iván has a physical altercation with his uncle, after which the boy runs away. This was only the start of his problems...

Excellent cinematography,a great score (Schubert chamber music) and particularly a tight script with good acting make this film a winner. 8/10.
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10/10
A swiftly paced yet thought provoking film, of our time.
brixtonbathtub5 August 2007
This is a swiftly paced yet thought provoking film in the same genre perhaps as, but no copy of, Certi Bambini, and whose characters are less wild and with more focus on just two individuals, Ivan and his best friend Efrain, and their relationships with Ivan's uncle and Efrain's mother.

For me the main theme was the exploitation of youth by adults in a tough world. If I was going to stage a mini festival on the theme it would include this film, Certi Bambini and If... by Lindsay Anderson. In all these films young people are growing up into worlds they had no making of, are suffering, don't accept their situations, and deal with them in very different ways. There is something universal in the character of Ivan that makes him represent Everyboy. Perhaps it's a bit pretentious of me to venture it, but from what I've read, and from hearing him on the radio I think Lindsay Anderson would have respected this film; it has a great feeling of humanity. Three countries, two eras, one related theme.

I could imagine the used car parts store near the beginning as some famous modern artist's 'installation', lovingly recreated for the Turner Prize at Tate Britain. Fifty years down the line when the internal combustion engine is history these scenes will be as enchanting as horses and carriages in New York at the beginning of the 20th century.

But this is Mexico, by its richer northern neighbour which provides the catalyst for the action. Jaime wants to follow the holy grail of a better life in the USA, which becomes an obsession. As a 56 year old viewer in the UK it made me pause for thought. Would I want to be 14 or 16 now, whether in Mexico or UK? How much do we care for our young people, and how much do we use and exploit them? This film made me consider the distinctions between 'wealth', 'value' and 'quality of life'.

I was so drawn into the story that I didn't notice the acting, which in itself suggests it was natural and excellent. Apparently Emery Eduardo Granados (Ivan) only had any acting training after he was selected. The editing did not follow what I assume is the modern Hollywood or UK television school convention of attention-deficit standard five seconds per shot, but was appropriate to the scenes, which suggests that Mexican film schools and the film industry have a maturity and confidence to forge their own path. For the director's first feature film, this is magnificent; balanced, gripping and moving, with great photography, concise editing and superb soundtrack.

This is a very personal perspective, but I would be surprised if it didn't win a number of prizes. Anyway, go and see it, and complete a variation on this well known quotation: 'Hell hath no fury...'. It doesn't end 'like a woman scorned',
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