Set in a remote Brazilian beach town and effectively
playing to the xenophobic instincts of a traveler’s worst nightmares, Turistas
details the gritty misfortunes that befall a group of young adventurers when
they first get marooned and then stalked in the nearby jungles. A tangled
combination of thriller elements, travelogue and more streamlined bits of
gruesome imperilment, the movie successfully wrings some novel tension out of
its exotic besiegement before eventually unraveling in its final third.
Young
Americans Alex (Josh Duhamel), his sister Bea (Olivia
Wilde) and her best friend Amy (Beau Garrett) have traveled to Brazil
for fun and adventure. On a rickety bus rocketing up a twisting mountain road,
they meet Pru (Melissa George), the only one among them who speaks the native
language Portuguese, plus Finn and Liam (Desmond Askew and Max Brown), two
British chaps who just want to experience for themselves the beautiful
Brazilian women they’ve heard so much about. After their driver loses control
and they’re all lucky to escape with their lives, these new friends find their
way to a cabana bar on a nearby beach, seeking to salvage their day rather than
simply waste eight hours waiting on a replacement bus.
A
hazy night of exotic liquors and sensuous dancing later, they wake up alone,
their possessions gone, and with no idea of the nightmare yet to come. Wandering
into a nearby town, they reacquaint themselves with Kiko (Agles Steib), a
friendly young villager who was among the last people they saw the night
before. After an incident with the townsfolk, the group follows Kiko into the
jungle — but is it to safety or into even further and worse danger?
With
both Blue Crush and Into the Blue, director John
Stockwell has shown himself to be adept both at showcasing toned actors and
actresses in skimpy attire, and at capably capturing action in and around water.
Here, abetted by cinematographer Enrique Chediak’s highly saturated, rich
chroma touch, Stockwell renders the film’s locale in memorable strokes. He also
gets an admirable amount of grounding detail right, such as the group’s delicate
barefoot negotiation of a rocky street after they’ve been stripped of their
passports and extra clothes.
Turistas
isn’t as strictly interested in brutality as some of its genre brethren, but it
does evidence a hearty acknowledgment of recent commercial trends. Debut
screenwriter Michael Arlen Ross seeds his generally restrained narrative
with a few innovative moments of shock violence and gore. While not
compulsory, per se, early on these moments help give Turistas a
careening sense of possibility; one is involved in the story because it seems
un-tethered to convention. The envelope is eventually pushed off the table,
though, with one scene in particular seeming to exist for no other reason than
to guarantee some word-of-mouth regarding its graphic nature. Similarly,
recalling elements of David Marconi’s 1993’s indie The Harvest, the
movie also overplays its hand a bit in the particulars of its third act torment;
when the antagonist, a sadistic doctor named Zamora
(Miguel Lunardi), reveals his intentions, this culminates with some
unintentionally amusing, politically indignant speechifying.
Where
Turistas really comes off the rail, though, is in its murky final third.
As it moves to more explicitly define its threat, the movie takes on a
de-saturated, bleach-bypass look, which might be fine were it not eventually
mixed with a nightfall of harsh, crosscutting shadows. Jittery or willfully
dark camerawork can sometimes effectively feed a film’s tension or
claustrophobia, as in 1999’s The Blair Witch Project or this year’s The Descent,
for example, with which I still had a lot of problems. The third act of Turistas,
on the other hand, just feels like a dark and stressed-out mess. The
movie is additionally mightily hamstrung — mortally wounded, really — by an
utter lack of spatial clarity.
Presented
in anamorphic widescreen, unrated cut transfer that faithfully replicates the evocative
photography of its theatrical exhibition, Turistas
includes an English language 5.1 Dolby digital sound mix and French and Spanish
Dolby surround mixes, as well as optional English and Spanish subtitles. Rather
surprisingly, apart from a one-minute teaser trailer for the recently released sequel
to The Hills Have Eyes, the only
bonus feature on this DVD is a 10-minute featurette on the effects work in the film. A big
strike for quantity, then, but a high mark, at least, for quality. In this bit,
Stockwell talks about the verité importance of some of the gruesome effects,
lest audiences be pulled out of the moment. Interviews with he, underwater DP
Pete Zuccarini, prosthetic specialist Michael Manzel and others shed light on
gambits both classic (a fake appendage for a shot in which a hook slices into a
foot) and complicated (a grisly surgery sequence in which a special breathing
mechanism had to be applied to a body cast, to simulate the rise and fall of the
chest cavity of a living person whose organs are being taken out). C(Movie) C (Disc)
Comments