- - - - - - mailing list writers gone wild! our space at MySpace support |
In the late 1940s, Mexico experienced an economic boom that shifted the cultural and artistic energy from country life the worn-out world of rancheras and haciendas into the cities. Movies were inevitably affected by this trend, and Mexican filmmakers quickly responded by creating a new genre to bring the city and its multiple temptations to the masses. This genre was the cabaretera, a bizarre amalgam of music and melodrama and noir, with liberal doses of sex (especially sadism) and what we now would call high camp, set in the squalid whorehouses, cheap bars, and dark glistening streets of "sin towns" like Ciudad Juarez. Not that these were the exclusive backgrounds of the cabaretera; theres a strong element of class conflict that also demanded contrasting wealthy environments, typically populated by hypocrites, that were just out of reach of the fallen singers and dancers who dominated these films. The cabaretera became a staple of postwar Mexican cinema and yielded many stars, but none as popular as Ninón Sevilla, a Cuban rhumba dancer who became an international success on the basis of her spirited performances in films with sleazy titles like Victims of Sin, Sensuality, I Dont Deny My Past, and the unquestioned masterpiece of the genre, Alberto Gouts Aventurera (1950). Sevilla is not a typical beauty but has ferocious vivacity as both dancer and actress in a persona that dazzlingly combines innocence and sensuality. The opening scenes of Aventurera ("adventuress") in Chihuahua show a happy-go-lucky Elena Tejero (Sevilla) with her loving parents in their cozy bourgeois home. When shady admirer Lucio (sexy Tito Junco) tries to lure her on a date, she refuses, saying "I wont lie to Mama." Mama, however, has no such compunction. When Elena returns, she discovers her mother in a lustful embrace with a family friend. Dazed and disheartened, she wanders through the streets, and discovers when she returns that her father has shot himself. The plot of Aventurera kicks into byzantine mode almost immediately, as Elena goes to Ciudad Juarez and tries to find a respectable job. Instead, shes drugged and forced into prostitution by her admirer Lucio, who supplies young girls to Rosaura (the thrilling Andrea Palma), a crime queenpin who runs a lucrative whorehouse fronted by a cabaret. Elena, as it happens, is a fine dancer and singer and becomes a popular star of the nightclub. She is less successful as a whore, however, refusing to go to bed with the customers and getting into catfights with men and women on the dance floor. Rosaura, of course, wont stand for such stuff and threatens her with disfigurement or worse.
This bittersweet reminder of the "wages of sin" cant compete with Elenas hunger for revenge against Rosaura and Lucio. Her conversion from goody two-shoes to immoral slut continues when Rosaura instructs a scarred, mute killer named El Rengo (Miguel Inclán) to carve up her face. Lucio arrives to rescue her from El Rengo and the "club," and she becomes an accomplice in a failed bank robbery that lands Lucio in jail. Ever on the move, Elena flees to Mexico City, where she again becomes a star. She meets a respectable lawyer Mario (Ruben Rojo), from "one of Guadaljaras oldest families." At this point, the film begins to play its highest cards, with a breathtaking new plot twist about every three minutes. Aventurera will surprise viewers who associate the 40s with repression and conventionality. The films attitudes, particularly toward Elena, have a distinctly modern feel, in spite of the many period trappings in the form of the musical numbers, the location settings, and especially the cautionary and redemptive aspects of the story. The film unfalteringly supports Elenas tortured odyssey through the lowest realms of Mexicos urban nightlife, reveling in scenes of her power as artist and woman even when shes using it seemingly beyond reason to punish those who have betrayed her. The feminist subtext here is rich and often blatant really as much text as subtext.
In addition to the riveting Ninón Sevilla, watch for wonderful, classic musical performances by Perez Prado and his Orchestra, Pedro Vargas, Ana Maria Gonzalez, El Trio Los Panchos, Los Angeles del Infierno, and Ray Montoya and his Orchestra. July 2000 | Issue 29 ACCESS: Unfortunately, Aventurera is not available on video at this writing, at least through the usual channels. Try eBay and the collectors video underground (Video Search of Miami, e.g.), or pray that some kind soul in a position to do so will reissue this gem. SOURCES: For the lyrics to the title song, go to musica.org. Credits and a picture of Ms. Sevilla can be found at Películas del Cine Mexicano. ALSO: More film reviews |