Wednesday, November 4, 2015
Indie Memphis Film Festival '15: Sean Baker's Tangerine
Much of the hype surrounding Sean Baker's Tangerine has involved how it was shot (with 3 iPhone 5s smartphones), and while that is unquestionably impressive, what stands out most to me about the picture are the performances by the two leads, Kitana Kiki Rodriguez and Mya Taylor, neither of which had any acting experience. But sometimes portraying the hardships of real life doesn't require the ability to act, and the fact the camera is so small you can barely see it can make it easy to forget it's even there. Tangerine is also unique in that it's one of the first movies I can recall that revolves specifically around the lives of transgender characters, making them into complex, believable people instead of goofy supporting characters. The movie sends them dangerously close to ridiculous comedy on a few occasions, but Baker's intentions are always empathetic. He wants us to truly understand the day-to-day struggle a transgender person has to face.
Sin-Dee (Rodriguez) is fresh out of prison and learns via her best friend Alexandra (Taylor) that her boyfriend/pimp has been cheating on her. This information thrusts Sin-Dee on a quest through the seedy streets of Los Angeles to track down the perpetrator who moved in on her man. A parallel story involves Armenian cab driver Razmik (Karren Karagulian), supporting a family by constantly driving around a bunch of idiotic Americans while secretly embracing his desire to spend private time with the transgender prostitutes on his route. Inner cutting the two stories together proves to be a fascinating device, as we are able to view two unique, yet startling similar forms of oppression due to a larger population's lack of understanding.
Both sides are not without their issues. Once Sin-Dee finds the woman her boyfriend was messing with, she proceeds to literally drag her around the city so they can confront him. This is amusing for a few minutes, but loses steam real quick. We get a glimpse of a series of Razmik's fares, each of which is some sort of caricature to drive home the ignorance of the people he is forced to deal with. The movie does have some big laughs, to be sure, but they come through the performances and not the pressure of the plot. Rodriguez and Taylor are both fantastic, with the latter having what I felt was the more difficult and challenging role. A scene late in the movie where Alexandra performs to a near empty bar could be Taylor's breakout moment.
The movie looks great. The lush sky of Los Angeles is ever present, always threatening to swallow the inhabitants of the city whole. Baker shoots with an urgency that perfectly matches the constant and chaotic lives of his characters. Though not his first feature, Tangerine feels like a true calling card, proof of a talent with the potential to create something amazing. He needs a bit more control over his material and could use some tighter editing, but even that aside, Tangerine is a movie worth experiencing, if anything for taking us into the lives of a series of outrageously memorable individuals.
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