I was
surprised by how much I enjoyed Jessica’s Yu’s Protagonist. I was almost
initially turned off by the Greek drama elements, although the puppet
characters played well against the heavy subject matter of each individual’s
reflection of their pasts in the film. The opening scene is in Greek with
subtitles, and I almost turned it off before it even really began so I didn’t
have to struggle through an hour and a half of subtitles. I soon discovered that
only the transitional pieces were in Greek, and the more they played, the more
I actually enjoyed them. They connect to each character in the film and played
a dual role of setting the context at the onset of transitional themes (of
which there were 13 total: character, provocation, opportunity, turning point,
fever, certainty, threshold, doubt, catharsis, reversal, reflection and
resolution).
What
stood out to me the most the Joe Loya, a Mexican man whose childhood was so
tumultuous despite the fact that he was a good kid who was pious and he
suffered abuse at the hands of his father whom he revered. In one particular
scene, Loya describes a card he made for his dad. Yu actually included the card
(or a reproduction of the card) which moved across the scene as Loya spoke. The
card said “I love you even though you hit me.” Loya drew two pictures in the
card. One was of a belt and other was a picture of his father walking on top of
what looked like a snow globe of the world. I don’t know why it touched me so
this dynamic where he worshipped his father who beat him and his brother and
blamed the two of them, children, for their mother’s kidney failure. I actually
cried as I listened to him talked. I found it tragic that a young boy so full
of love and life was stripped of his positive potential and ended up suffering
from his own psychoses and inner turmoil that drove him to cast fear into
people the way his father did him. He actually took pleasure in having people
shaking in fear at his hands.
I do feel
too that Yu did a great job at giving a full sense of the lives of each of her
character studies. The themes of self-control and taking your life into your
own hands are prominent to the viewer in a way that they could never be for
each of the protagonists, each of whom were consumed and victimized by the
circumstances of their own lives. That being said, it could have been a bit
shorter. A couple of questions I have are one, why did a female writer focus
only on male character study. I want to know what she might have gotten out of
this project. Having asked this question, I also want to point out that I
understand the circumstances of abuse and exclusion can happen to anyone. I
guess I ultimately want to know how Yu personally related to these men’s
stories. I also am intensely curious about Klein’s life. His has the most
societal impact and follows a timeline that parallels actually political events.
His reflection gave new perspective to the terrorist attacks of the early 80s.
I am not versed in the political of that region at that time, but still, the
opportunity to fill in gaps, even if his recount is flawed by the lapse of time
and biased, has to be an ethnographer’s wet dream. I am also curious as to
Loya’s current relationship with his father. It wasn’t until about partway
through the film that I realize he had not actually murdered his father. I
wanted to know if he has contact with his father now that he has grown and
actually recognized that he possessed the same neuroses that his father
displayed during his youth.

I like how your review goes in and out of what you seen from the film, versus how you felt while you were watching it. Sometimes we think we are in one mode, only to realize that we have evolved into people we once only hoped to become. I'm not sure how I feel about the use of the two colors... While it did make it easy for me to read, I also felt that it might not be viewed as professional. On the contrast, I really loved the street art in the background, I felt like your page has mastered the art of authentic expression.
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