No future / No hope / No narrative? Víctor Gaviria y sus películas Rodrigo D: No futuro, La vendedora de rosas y Sumas y restas
2019; Autonomous University of Madrid; Issue: 48 Linguagem: Inglês
10.15366/secuencias2018.48.005
ISSN2529-9913
Autores Tópico(s)Crime, Deviance, and Social Control
ResumoStarting with his directorial debut, Rodrigo D: No futuro (1990), until his magnus opus, Sumas y restas (2005) –on the social phenomenon of narcotraffic in Medellín–, passing through what is arguably his best-known feature film, La vendedora de rosas (1998), the films of the Colombian director Víctor Gaviria put the distinction between the realms of reality and fiction in crisis, as well as the distinction between representation and what is represented. In this sense, Gaviria’s work challenges the whole notion of representation itself. In this article, I argue that this is due to the fact that Gaviria’s artistic project involves a permanent reflection on how to represent a reality that is, in the end, impossible to represent, such as the case of the violent reality of Medellín’s slums. Reading the three aforementioned films in reverse, starting with the most recent one and ending with the one that launched the director’s cinematic career, I suggest that the real contribution of Gaviria to film history is that, in order to consider the living experiences of those living in extreme marginality, at the periphery of the periphery, he reccurs to a model that is not based on representation but on auto-representation. This model has almost no narrative content, but it is highly affective, including the most wretched subjects of Medellín at the end of the 20th Century, those subjects who lack future, hope, and even narratives.
Referência(s)