Maria
Full of Grace (2004)
Rated PG13
Starring: Catalina Sandino Moreno, Yenny
Paola Vega, and Guilied Lopez
Rating:

out
of

|
One of last year's big surprises come Academy Award time was the nomination
of Catalina Sandino Moreno for the Best Actress statue for her work in
Maria Full of Grace, a small film that made less than $7,000,000 in the
United States. Although she did not win the award, her performance is
just as outstanding as Hillary Swank's winning role in the blockbuster
Million Dollar Baby.
Moreno stars as Maria Alvarez,
a pregnant seventeen year old who has just quit her job at a Colombian
floral plantation. Tired of giving what
little she makes to support her mother, grandmother, sister and nephew,
Maria is offered a job as a "mule" by a man she meets at a block
party. A "mule" swallows grape-sized packets of heroin -- sometimes
up to 100 of them -- and, while the packets remain in the stomach, the
mule takes a flight from Colombia to the United States, attempting to
avoid detection by customs agents. Once inside the U.S., the mule expels
the packets and gets paid $5000, a sum of money not easy to come by working
for nothing in Colombia.
After making the decision to make the dangerous journey, Maria meets
Lucy Diaz (Guilied Lopez), who has made the trip twice before. Lucy gives
Maria some pointers on how to make the journey without being caught. Before
leaving for New York, Maria finds her friend, Blanca (Yenny Paola Vega),
has also signed up to be a mule. Maria tries to talk her out of it, but
Blanca resists the advice. Together, along with Lucy, the friends make
the trip to the U.S. with a potentially lethal dose of drugs in their
stomachs. And once they make it to New York, even if they do get past
customs and get the drugs out of their stomachs, they're not safe from
harm.
Although the subject matter
might sound sensationalistic, the performances and the flow of the movie
keep it fresh and real. Because of the independent
nature of the film, I wasn't sure what would happen next. I never thought
the film was following any kind of formula and, as a result, the movie
plays almost like a documentary. Writer/director Joshua Martson asks the
viewer to see a different perspective than the the typical American media's
version of "the drug war." Since the audience can see the motivation
behind Maria's drug smuggling is not meant to subvert the American way
of life but to make the best of one of the very few opportunities to make
a living for herself and her baby, the customs agents are transformed
into the "bad guys" even though they're just doing their jobs.
By allowing the viewer to see why drugs offer the promise of a way out
of poverty from such a different perspective than most of us are used
to seeing, Maria Full of Grace is eye-opening without ever being preachy
about its subject matter. Definitely worth seeing. Trivia: Catalina
Sandino Moreno became the first actress ever to be nominated to Best
Actress at the Oscars for a role that is spoken entirely in Spanish.
(Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |