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Rodrigo Garcias cast and crew had to move very quickly to
produce this small gem. Shot in just eighteen days on a tight budget, the entire movie
consists of nine 10- to 14-minute segments, each shot on a different location and in real
time. The film opens in a prison setting and closes in a cemetery. Each of the nine
separate vignettes tells the story of a woman negotiating an emotional crossroads. As the
protagonist of one tale turns up as a minor character in another womans story, the
interweaving plots lines create the sense of a domestic epic reminiscent of Robert
Altmans Nashville.
The film opens with Sandra (Elpida Carrillo) in prison, awakening
to the constricting web to which her past decisions have led. Wanting desperately, but
unable to connect with her daughter during visiting hours, Sandra lashes out at the guard
and rejects the proffered friendship of a fellow inmate. In her moment of rebellion, she
realizes in some concrete specifics how her life is going to be hell.
Sandra turns up again much later in Nine Lives, as a minor
character being arrested at a sleazy motel. Her crime remains unclear, but her fate is
already known to the audience. Here, what will become her private hell is merely the
tawdry backdrop for another character, Ruth (Sissy Spacek), wrestling with her own
emotional imprisonment.
Ruth, too, has appeared as a minor character in another previous
vignette, as the wife of a wheelchair-bound husband and mother to the teenager Samantha
(Amanda Seyfreid). Ruths motel rendezvous represents her attempt to find the
physical and emotional connection missing in her home life. From yet another previous
vignette the audience knows Sammy is claustrophobically trapped in the emotional web of
interlocutor between her parents. As Lisa Gay Hamiltons character Holly observes at
one point, "you never know where love is going to show its ugly face."
Garcia prepared a carefully crafted script, and then turned it over to
a well-matched set of accomplished actors. The richly nuanced and often understated
character studies which result have the feel of Chekhov. The moral seriousness of Nine
Lives, about the dark internal forces which guide the human heart, evokes a
Bergmaneqsue vision. Yet, despite Garcias pronouncements about his preoccupation
with the "imprisonment of relationships," Nine Lives captures the
magical redemptive qualities as well. Without ever losing the tension of individuals
struggling to find balance between hope and despair, and almost against Garcias
will, this film celebrates the joys of human interconnection, the frailty of human desire,
and the awesome power of hope and love to transcend the ties that bind and imprison.
- Les Wright