Stars:
Luke Ganalon, Joseph A. Garcia, Miriam ColonUser Reviews
Overly familiar coming-of-age taleBased on the 1972 novel
by Rudolfo Anaya (a favorite among high school English teachers),
"Bless Me, Ultima" is an autobiographical coming-of-age tale set in
1940s New Mexico. The story is narrated by a now-adult Antonio
reflecting back on the events that happened to him and his family when
he was a little boy. This includes the arrival of Ultima (Miriam Colon),
a sort of cultural shaman, who has come to live out her final days with
his family. Weather-beaten and leather-skinned, Ultima is filled with
old person wisdom and the power to both heal and cast out evil spirits.
It is the latter, in particular, that ends up causing trouble with some
of the people in the village, who suspect her of being a "bruja."
Written
and directed by Carl Franklin, "Bless Me, Ultima" is what "To Kill a
Mockingbird" might have been like had Harper Lee seen fit to imbue it
with generous touches of Magic Realism (in that version Boo Radley
probably would have been an actual ghost). As befits the genre that also
brought us "Like Water for Chocolate," "Bless Me, Ultima" comes replete
with incantations, magic spells and a Significant Owl that passively
observes all the human activity, then swoops in at keys moments of the
story to make its presence felt. Antonio is surrounded by adults who are
steeped in religious superstition, and he is forced to bear witness to
some pretty horrendous actions arising from that fact. But he also
learns from Ultima that, while evil may indeed exist in the world, one
can overcome it by becoming one with nature and the spirits that inhabit
it.
The structure of "Bless Me, Ultima" tends to be episodic and
choppy, a situation that leaves a number of plot lines under-served and
a number of characters (Antonio's older brothers, for instance)
underdeveloped. on the other hand, the wide-eyed Luke Ganalon makes for
an appealing and charming Antonio, and Benito Martinez ("The Shield,"
"Sons of Anarchy") scores as the dad who dreams of one day moving his
family to California.
Despite all the supernatural and
preternatural touches, "Bless Me, Ultima" feels overall pretty familiar
as coming-of-age tales go, but the unusual setting and Ganalon's
performance earn it a mild recommendation.
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