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The Garcia family works hard. Their daughter, Ana, has a long commute
to Beverly Hills High from the barrios of L.A., but once there, she tries to conceal the
depths of her humble origins. Only after she graduates and grudgingly agrees to pitch in
to the family business finishing couture gowns in a stifling factory space
does she learn just how hard they toil.
With her iBook and JanSport backpack, Ana has been sheltered from the
familys daily struggles keeping the business afloat, paying rent, even
putting food on the table. While it has become commonplace to see a woman onscreen reject
expectations as either wife or mother, and to see her embrace choices that include a
university education, for the family in Real Women
this thinking is unprecedented and incomprehensible, because Anas family needs her. She has a strong emotional bond with her
abuelo her grandfather and an
antagonistic love-hate relationship to a mother who worries that as a
butterball, Ana will become an old maid, like her other sister, Estela. When
Ana considers a future beyond her family, it is cataclysmic decision. But rather than
leaving her family behind, she learns to celebrate their traditions, while being true to
her future school.
As Ana, eighteen-old America Ferrera begins as a plaintive adolescent
and matures into an outspoken woman who is proud of her body, defiant about being
exploited as a cheap laborer, but tender to her family. Anas scenes of first love
with Jimmy, an anglo classmate, are rife with charm, recalling George Roy Hills A Little Romance. Rather than
savoring a sweet morning after, Ana finds herself confronted by her mother. Carmen can
somehow intuit that Ana has lost her virginity and chastises her for being a whore. It is
a disquieting landing after a brief interlude in the clouds.
After a lifetime of being consigned to roles of a latina Butterfly
McQueen, Lupe Ontiveros, recently seen in Chuck & Buck and Storytelling,
is emerging as a formidable actress. As the matriarch Carmen, she is a ball of
contradictions. She wants the best for her daughter but does not see the value of her
attending college. When Anas father Raul suggests that Ana might benefit from higher
education, Carmen can see only family responsibility: Ill teach her to sew,
raise children. Its a matter of principle. Now its her turn. After
decades of bending and scraping, and literally working her fingers to the bone as a
seamstress, Carmen cannot fathom Ana leaving the family, even temporarily. To do so would
be abandonment.
In a key scene, Ana finds herself on the verge of heatstroke and strips
down to her skivvies. Mother Carmen is mortified, and grows even more shocked as Ana
persuades her factory co-workers, all women, to do the same. One by one they compare their
battle scars sagging breasts, stretch marks, and cellulite. But on this occasion the
room is filled with laughter and the women are empowered.
Few American filmmakers have explored Latino lives with authenticity
and intimacy. There is Allison Anders Mi Vida Loca, her feature about Southern California girl gangs, and
the recent work of John Sayles (including his upcoming Casa de los Babys). A superb "small"
film, La Ciudad, was,
unfortunately, seen by very few. In Real Women, Patricia Cardoso has done right
in her precise and unsentimental direction of a screenplay based on Josefina Lopezs
autobiographical play. Due to a shower of praise at this years Sundance Festival,
including the Dramatic Audience award and Jury Prize for acting (shared by both Ferrera
and Ontiveros), HBO has released the feature in theaters, rather than on cable.
- Jerry Weinstein