Friday 9 August 2024

Bad Living (Mal Viver) [2023]

 João Canijo’s Bad Living – which formed an ingeniously imagined and magnificently shaped diptych with Living Bad, where the two counterpointed and bled into each other like reflections on a shattered mirror – is a work of such dazzling formal exactitude, simmering emotional ferocity and hypnotic visual compositions that it leaves one crushed and exhilarated in parallel. It, incidentally, eloquently recalled the supercharged undercurrents of Bergman and the unsettlingly visceral palettes of Martel, while retaining a distinctive perspective and texture. Set in a hotel in the coastal town of Ofir – its retro décor, forlorn atmosphere, and interplay of spaciousness and claustrophobia made it a brooding character, in the same way as the sublimely beguiling and instinctively unnerving Saint-Tropez villa in Deray’s mesmeric La Piscine was – the deceptively fluid narrative is structured akin to a fiendish voyeur gliding along the different spaces in order to snoop at what’s transpiring, and weaving those intensely private conversations into an impression of complex intergenerational fault-lines that’re coloured by unresolved past contexts, memories, blames, wounds and deep-set misunderstandings. Over the course of a weekend, we witness the devastatingly fateful unravelling of the dysfunctional relationship between four troubled women – the abrasive matriarch Sara (Rita Blanco) who owns the failing property, her irrevocably crumbling elder daughter Piedade (Anabela Moreira) and volatile younger daughter Raquel (Cleia Almeida) who manage operations, and Piedade’s ravishing, estranged, grief-stricken daughter Salomé (Madalena Almeida) – who’re craving for their respective mother’s love, but continuously scarring each other in the process. Rapturously shot in arrestingly framed long, static shots – with the vibrant colours beautifully juxtaposing the moody, lonely atmosphere – the astonishingly enacted film substantiated Tolstoy’s hypothesis that each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.







Director: Joao Canijo

Genre: Drama/Family Drama/Psychological Drama

Language: Portuguese

Country: Portugal

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