"CATCH YOU FUCKERS AT A BAD TIME?"

Miss Bala (2019)

SPOILERS for both MISS BALAs

You may find this shocking, but the American remake of the great 2011 Mexican film MISS BALA is not as good as the original. Director Catherine Hardwicke (THIRTEEN, LORDS OF DOGTOWN, THE NATIVITY STORY) doesn’t Hollywood it up quite as much as the trailer made me think she might, but maybe she should’ve. She stays maybe 75% faithful to the original, maybe more, but the normal, slick style severely blunts the impact of the story compared to the previous suspensefully long, unblinking takes and documentary-like realism. It goes from an intense CHILDREN OF MEN type of style that puts you in the middle of it all with the protagonist to just some random, normal TAKEN sequel or something. And the major story changes that do happen are, in almost all cases, less interesting than the earlier version.

It might seem okay if I hadn’t seen the original. Gina Rodriguez (ANNIHILATION) is quite good in the lead. In this version her name is Gloria Fuentes and she’s an American citizen returning to Tijuana to visit her friend Suzu (Cristina Rodlo, The Terror) and help her with her makeup when she tries out for the Miss Baja California pageant. After an audition they go to a party where her friend tries to flirt with the corrupt chief of police (Damian Alcazar, MEN WITH GUNS), who supposedly has some sway over who wins the pageant. So they’re there when members of the Las Estrellas gang come in to massacre the police, and Gloria, having seen them sneak in while she was in the bathroom, escapes alone.

So the next day she’s alone in Mexico, trying to find her missing friend, making the mistake of trusting a random cop, who brings her right to Lino Esparza (Ismael Cruz Cordova, IN THE BLOOD), the boss of the gang that shot up the cops. He threatens Suzu’s family and forces Gloria to be a crime accomplice and quasi-girlfriend. Meanwhile, DEA agents including one played by Thomas Dekker (the TV John Connor) threaten and try to use her and make promises but don’t seem much inclined to keep her safe. So she’s stuck in the middle of a bunch of assholes.

Hardwicke, of course, directed the first TWILIGHT movie, and here she does flirt a little with treating Lino as an alluring bad boy like Edward. He’s younger looking and less brutish than the equivalent character in the original. (I have no idea what real cartel guys look like, but I bet it’s not these handsome gangsters with fashionable form-fitting clothes and hipster top knots and shit.)

There’s a scene where she sets Lino up for a bust, but the DEA doesn’t rescue her like they promised, so she helps Lino up and carries him away from gunfire. In maybe the most successful deviation from the original plot he brings her to a normal family event and tries to convince her he’s just some kind of anti-hero doing what he has to do in a fight against corrupt cops. He even teaches her to shoot an AR-15 and lets his guard down enough for her to aim at at him. But it’s kind of a cruel gaslighting because she’s seen with her own eyes depraved shit that can’t be written off like that.

Another big change has to do with the part where she smuggles money over the border and is told to tell Lino that there’s a mole in his gang. I prefer the dangerous manipulation of simply not delivering the message, but in this one she is aware that she’s the mole, because the police put a bug in her phone. She does give them the message and has to try to move the bug to someone else’s phone, which admittedly does create some effective drama.

To me the most befuddling change is to one of the signature scenes: when she “wins” the pageant in an obvious set up, and in an excruciatingly awkward unbroken take the devastated real contestants try to play along even though she can’t even smile. For some reason Hardwicke and screenwriter Gareth Dennet-Alcocer don’t bother with all the tension of the other contestants working hard and seeing someone who wasn’t even around take the crown through flagrant corruption. They just have her smile and play her part.

I’m thankful for this movie because seeing the trailer made me remember that there was already a movie with this title, and that’s when I watched it. It’s definitely not an action movie, which this one was marketed as. Even though that’s missing the point of what made the original character interesting – she doesn’t have to turn into an asskicker to prove her toughness – I thought maybe this could be the fun guns and explosions version.

They do in fact change the important scene where she has to park a car with dead bodies in the trunk at a police headquarters to parking a car bomb in front of a safehouse and then watching it explode. And yes, (ENDING SPOILERS COMING UP) they change it so that her friend turns out to still be alive, and she gets to rescue her at the end, and shoot the bad guy. In fact, they go full bullshit by replacing the gut punch ending (she betrays the cartel and foils their assassination plot, but the authorities don’t care and arrest her along with them) with some shit where one of their associates (Anthony Mackie, REAL STEEL) turns out to be undercover, and tries to recruit her to the CIA! I guess if it had been a hit it could’ve been another franchise for Hardwicke to be replaced by male directors on.

And yet the overall feel is not a heightened, more over-the-top version. Though our Miss Bala does get to use some bullets, I believe there’s less action than in the original, since they ditched the huge setpiece where she’s caught in the middle of a big battle upon returning from the states. And everything just feels cleaner, safer, weaker.

Maybe sometimes it’s more dramatic to look vulnerable

They seem to be uncomfortable with showing her in vulnerable positions, treated as a sex object by both the gang leader and the pageant, worrying about what they intend to do to her, having to run around and hide when wearing very little. All that is toned down. In the original, both the taping of money onto her body and the removal of it are degrading, scary scenes. He pulls out a knife and starts hacking at the tape, it seems like he’s gonna chop her up. Here it’s like, nah, we don’t want to dwell on her peril. Let’s get it over with quick.

I get not wanting to be upset. But what’s the point of telling a story about someone going through something harrowing if you’re worried that tension is in poor taste? If you’re gonna wimp out on that then make her do MMA and wheelies and shit. Make her the pro-Latinx PEPPERMINT. Make it worth our while.

Definitely check out the original, though. It’s great.

 

This entry was posted on Monday, May 6th, 2019 at 11:36 am and is filed under Action, Reviews, Thriller. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

6 Responses to “Miss Bala (2019)”

  1. So what you’re saying is that this Miss Bala is only the runnerup!

  2. “Thirteen” got me really excited about Catherine Hardwicke, but after that she veered away from the verite style that made that movie so compelling towards something more Hollywood slick, and it’s been so frustrating to see her abandon her strength in favor of being more bland and anonymous. It feels to me like she’s trying to play the game but it’s playing her. Like maybe she thinks she’s developing more commercial skills, but she’s forgetting that the things you do badly are as much a part of your style as the things you do well? Anyway I wish she would re-embrace the kind of filmmaker she used to be, because she used to be great.

  3. Another really good Hardwicke film was LORDS OF DOGTOWN. She seemed to have a voice and a style, but then TWILIGHT kinda wiped it out, and MISS BALA continues the trend of her making more Hollywood trash, and not the fun kind. I did hear some good things about MISS YOU ALREADY (2015), but not a lot of people watch it. Many directors have lost their voice by going to Hollywood. Hopefully, she can get it back, but it’s harder to make smaller films with unique voice rather than a Hollywood trash. The competition to get to the direct actually good Hollywood film is fierce. Not everyone can wait 14 years for the right project like Patty Jenkins, but you can always do tv when trash like MISS BALA get handed to you.

  4. grimgrinningchris

    May 6th, 2019 at 5:10 pm

    Yeah, I really liked THIRTEEN and I thought LORDS OF DOGTOWN was great. Her output since then… notsomuch.

    I do want to see the original of this one now, though, so thanks for that, Vern.

  5. I remember THIRTEEN vividly. I was about 13-14 when it came out and it was filmed all around my social hangouts and maybe even at my middle school (iirc). It was very accurate. I dated that girl.

  6. If you’re looking to complete a “Don’t Ever Go to Mexico” double feature with Rambo: Last Blood, this isn’t a bad one. Having not seen the original, I actually found this pretty watchable and entertaining – an interesting mix of Collateral, Sicario, and yes, Twilight. Hardwicke had to have known she was hitting alot of the same beats with the naive-yet-strong willed girl getting indoctrinated into a group of hot bad boys led by a smoldering brooding guy she kinda has a thing with. I was actually positive there was going to be a love triangle between her, the cartel leader, and the ruggedly handsome DEA guy who shows up, which unfortunately never happens. #teamDEAguy

    I kinda wish i saw the original since this review makes it sound a lot more interesting – but what we get here is a perfectly acceptable PG-13 Girl Power Hollywood movie, complete with sequel-baiting ending and empowering closing credits song by Dianne Warren. I actually wouldn’t be opposed to the further adventures of Miss Bala teased at the end, maybe a shared universe crossover with Rambo. He can teach her the ways of tearing out clavicle bones and leaving heads in the middle of the road before she uh…gets murdered and sets him off again.

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