Joshua Marston's Maria Full of Grace: Thicker Photographs

Written by Alan Dale
Published August 05, 2004
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Marston is so very serious he comes close to inspiring irreverence: when Maria gags in her first attempts to swallow the grapes, I wondered if that had any connection to why her boyfriend isn't in love with her. It wouldn't have hurt the movie at all if she herself or the girl training her had said something along these lines. It would have made it more roundedly human. Throughout I couldn't help thinking of wonderful opportunities for low-brow parody (e.g., if there's another Airplane movie). There's tempting material even in actual news reports, for instance, this story about a dog used as a drug mule that Dutch authorities for safety reasons won't permit to be sent to England for the trial of the people who implanted 11 canisters of drugs in his body. (Do the British want him to testify? Can't they just depose him in the Netherlands?) I can scarcely think of a person I've ever met whose story, if faithfully replicated, wouldn't elicit a more varied response than Maria Full of Grace does.

When asked why he let the actors have so much say in shaping their characters, Marston replied:

Because I'm not a Colombian and because I'm not a native Spanish-speaker. And because they, all the actors, have a whole set of knowledge and experience that is relevant to their characters that I could never have. It would be presumptuous of me to dictate and close off what the script was.
"Presumptuous" of the writer-director to have final say? He speaks as if there were no difference between the actors and the characters they play. (Hint: one of these groups is not made up of real people.) At a certain point this degree of tact becomes indistinguishable in its onscreen result from lack of imagination. Last year's celebrity drug-burn story Wonderland had more aesthetic shape precisely because it was free to disrespect its central character, porn "legend" John Holmes.

Marston has made an amazingly lean debut feature. He has risen above the almost overwhelming temptations in American movies to shape his story for melodrama and heroic romance. He has gathered data so as to have an accurate sense of his story and then intelligently and steadily crafted the data so as to present the story as it would likely play out, and to convey what it would feel like to its protagonist. But everything he trimmed wasn't fat.

You can find this review and a lot besides at The Kitchen Cabinet.

Alan Dale is the author of What We Do Best: American Movie Comedies of the 1990s and Comedy Is a Man in Trouble: Slapstick in American Movies.

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Alan Dale earned a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from Princeton University and a J.D. from Yale Law School. He currently works as a corporate tax attorney in Portland, Oregon. He is the author of What We Do Best: American Movie Comedies of the 1990s and Comedy Is a Man in Trouble: Slapstick in American Movies.
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Joshua Marston's Maria Full of Grace: Thicker Photographs
Published: August 05, 2004
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Filed Under: Video: Art House, Video: Drama, Video: Foreign Language, Video: Suspense and Mystery
Writer: Alan Dale
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#1 — August 10, 2004 @ 16:40PM — Chris Knipp [URL]

Admirable review, the most thorough I've seen, and your supportive material and footnoting are most welcome (this is a topic we need background on before we can really evaluate the film properly). Thanks a lot for this. I too noted the lack of humor; the lack of quirky detail -- features of a certain over-earnestness. I think the film is being rather overrated at present, but I'm nonetheless glad Marston was able to make it and did such a good job and got such a great start on what could well be a fine career as a director.

Did you note -- did anybody say -- why they shot in Ecuador rather than Columbia for most or all of the Colombian sequences? I thought Marston said somewhere but can't find it.

#2 — August 10, 2004 @ 17:30PM — Alan Dale [URL]

Thanks for the comment. Always welcome to hear someone out there is responding to my work.

As for shooting in Ecuador: "'The original intention of the project was that we would go to Colombia - just me, Paul, and the d.p., Jim Denault - and [work with] an entirely Colombian cast and crew,' remembers Marston. 'Unfortunately we couldn't shoot in Colombia because of the political situation. We shot in Ecuador instead, but we're doing everything possible to safeguard all that which is Colombian about the project - and part of that is to make sure that everyone who is on screen is actually Colombian.'" [http://www.spanix.com/html/ShowNews.asp?ID=811&PG=8]

#3 — January 21, 2005 @ 13:37PM — Fernando Rivas

I found your review of Maria Full of Grace somewhate insensitive, though not entirely off the mark. I don't think there's too much playable humor in the airplane bathroom scene and the defecated pellets. I do think Catalina, the actress in the role, should have given more terror to the moment but I don't think a bit of slapstick would have been the way to go.
Your comparison to her performance with legendary Hollywood actresses is kind of laughable. You are mixing apples and oranges. This woman comes from a background as different from Hollywood as Earth from Venus. To hold her to that yardstick is blatantly ridiculous.
As to Marston's choice to include bits of the actual life of the actors in the script your comment about them not being real people shows a remarkably sterile disconnect. While they are not involved in the drug trade their connection with their homeland is a crucial part of this story and the
authenticity which results from their
particular brand of language and custom is as rare in films these days as truth.
You also question Maria's choice to get involved in the drug trade as unreal insofar as there is other work available. If you listen to the director's commentary on the DVD he addresses this issue. Maria is not perfect as a character and is not meant to be. She has made a bad choice - not just because of necessity - but partly because of her rebellious nature.
Another point of contention for you is the fact that the customs police release her. Again, Marston addresses this in the commentary. Fear of lawsuits and investigations as well as procedural change that might result from taking action keeps the agents from holding Maria. I agree, however, that the
resolution of this issue in the film is a bit too pat. They might have been able to keep her at least a day or two to check for the 'return' of the pellets.
In general I think you're looking for something in this flick that is not there and not meant to be. What is there, Marston's view of the drug trade and Colombian culture, is, from my own experiences in NYC, right on the money - or at least as a film is going to get these days.

#4 — January 21, 2005 @ 14:38PM — Alan Dale [URL]

Well, we disagree about slapstick. But I don't consider a lack of humor in itself to constitute sensitivity, or any other virtue.

Actually, I think you're the one mixing apples and oranges when you write "this woman comes from a background as different from Hollywood as Earth from Venus," if by "this woman" you mean Maria rather than the actress playing her. My point: by using a nonprofessional actress Marston doesn't get the advantage of all that a professional actress, because of her drive and experience, can bring to a working-class role. Barbara Stanwyck was working class but Constance Bennett wasn't--neither was "from Hollywood." But it doesn't matter b/c they worked as ACTRESSES not demographic representatives.

"Remarkably sterile disconnect" paragraph: You haven't made yourself clear. I'm not talking about the actors, I'm talking about the characters, and I repeat: Characters are not real people, not even when Colombians are cast as Colombians. As for the contributions of the actors to the script, you hardly need remind me of that since I singled it out for praise earlier in the review you're ostensibly responding to. My point in that later paragraph is that the movie would offer a greater aesthetic experience if the writer-director had shaped the material more. He's too respectful of his characters, as if they were real people, towards whom one does want to act respectfully. But with realistic fictional characters it's part of the author's JOB to second-guess them, to show their mixed motives, to satirize them, to see them not only as they'd like to be seen. The more varied a response he evokes, the more fully human they seem. By contrast, Maria has two dimensions: she gets into trouble b/c she's stubborn but we have to sympathize with her b/c she's had limited opportunities.

I didn't say Maria's choice to get involved in the drug trade was "unreal" insofar as there is other work available. (What does "unreal" mean when we're talking about a fiction film, all of which by definition is "unreal"? Did you mean "unrealistic"?) I said that without telling us what her other choices were, Marston could not give us a panoramic view of Colombian society that would enable us to understand her choice in a broader social context.

While it's interesting to know what Marston said on the DVD, that commentary isn't part of the movie, which I saw and reviewed before the DVD was released. None of what you paraphrased from his commentary, however, contradicts what I said in the review.

Did you mean for your tone to be so p.c.-authoritarian? It's only a movie, it's only a movie review.

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