Bardo review: Big Netflix money spent for maximum self-indulgence
The subtitle is Bardo, The Netflix movie from The Revenant Birdman director Alejandro G. Iñárritu, is The False Chronicle of A Handful Of Truths. But as long as we’re attaching pretentious postscripts, a quotation from MacbethPerhaps this is a better choice: Nothing is the result of sound and fury. Many things happen here Bardo,Many of the scenes are surreal. In this whimsical and personal movie, there are elaborate music numbers, dreams sequences, alternate histories, as well chronological hiccups. Once the lights dim and the spell is broken all the striking imagery feels remarkably empty.
Fairness is key. Bardo’s main character, celebrated Mexican journalist and documentarian Silverio Gama (Daniel Giménez Cacho), is also tormented by the void. He’s a man without a country, both in the sense that he splits his time between Mexico and the United States, and in a more abstract, existential way. Silverio started his career as a journalist. Silverio left his post and country in order to pursue his dream of becoming a documentary filmmaker on his own. He’s found tremendous success in his new career, but something’s still troubling Silverio. He’s deeply insecure, but wildly egotistical at the same time. That sounds like a contradiction, but it’s familiar to anyone who’s ever known any artist, ever.
Bardo feels like a sketchpad or a series of snapshots, knitting together mundane moments with profound to form a loose narrative about Silverio’s life. Silverio and Lucia (Griselda Siccliani) are still haunted by the death of Mateo, their stillborn baby. Literally — Lucia walks out of the delivery room still trailing the boy’s umbilical cord, which stretches to interminable length, hanging out of the bottom of her hospital gown like a tail.
Photo: S. De R.L. de C./Limbo Films
From there, Iñárritu jumps forward to Silverio’s imagined reunion with an old frenemy, in which he’s humiliated on Mexican television by a former colleague who accuses him of being too good for his home country. Then there’sAnother jump, this one taking us to the meat of the story: Silverio is the first Latin American journalist to receive a major award from an American association, and he’s being fêted on both sides of the border to celebrate.
The events in the film suggest Iñárritu is couching an autobiographical story in elaborate, stylized metaphor. He isn’t a documentary filmmaker, but his Academy Awards — Best Director for The RevenantAward for Best Picture, Director and Screenplay Birdman — provide a neat, convenient parallel to Silverio’s big honor. There’s also the fact that Cacho looks like Iñárritu, and that the men come from the same privileged economic and social class.
Iñárritu does flagellate himself for his bourgeois sins: Silviero fancies himself a man of the people, but he fails to defend an Indigenous maid when she’s treated poorly at a posh beach resort. He demands to speak to a manager every time an encounter isn’t going his way. He dismisses his son’s identity crisis — the boy was raised in both Mexico and California, and feels like he doesn’t belong in either place — while nursing his own musings about what it It means, really meansTo be Mexican.
In the end, that particular line of thought leads to Silverio having a smoke with Hernán Cortés (Ivan Massagué) atop a pile of Aztec corpses in the central square of Mexico City, a scene that pulls back to reassure viewers that they shouldn’t worry, it’s all a movie. Just a bit of playing pretend, that’s all. The sequence’s scope and artistry are impressive, but as the culmination of 165 minutes of navel-gazing (and that’s the cut-down version: the original cut ran 179 minutes), it’s an anticlimactic note. The surrealist, early scene with Silverio on the L.A. Metro riding in water and axolotls at his feet finally comes around. The payoff is too slow to justify the wait.
Photo: S. De R.L. de C.V./Limbo Films
These are just two examples of strong structural connections. Many of these connections are important. Bardo is made up of scenes that don’t relate to each other in any meaningful way, and the film’s many time-jumps and flights of fancy obscure any emotional truths that lie at its center. The only sentimental thread that does come through is Silverio’s love for Lucia. But — with no offense meant to Siccliani, or her presumed real-life counterpart — there’s nothing revolutionary about a one-dimensional hot wife who gazes adoringly at the camera, is always up for a topless romp, and doesn’t have much else to say.
In an era where the egos of powerful men in the entertainment industry have taken a beating, it’s an achievement of sorts to make a film that’s this self-indulgent. Netflix deserves the credit (or the blame). Netflix is one of last places Oscar-winning directors can get a large sum of money to do as he pleases. The egotism is so potent, in fact, that it begins to erode the film’s humble façade after a while, raising the question of whether this is actually self-effacing satire, or simply the year’s shallowest collection of deep thoughts. The lack of clarity is indicative that there has been a failure in communicating.
A self-proclaimed truth-teller who lies to himself to protect his ego is a funny idea, and early on in the film, Silverio says, “If you don’t know how to play, you don’t deserve to be taken seriously.” But in spite of Iñárritu’s soft protestations, BardoIt takes itself seriously. And its self-awareness is so limited as Iñárritu drones on and on, the inverse relationship between his own self-seriousness and how seriously the viewer is inclined to take him reaches a breaking point. The film’s title refers to a Buddhist concept of the liminal space between death and rebirth, which ends up resonating in a different way than its creator may have intended: BardoIt tries so hard to accomplish too much, that it eventually says nothing.
Bardo: False History of A Handful Of TruthsIt is being released in broad theatrical releases ahead of the Netflix release on December 16.
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