Monday, June 7, 2010

the pope's toilet

They don't have bike trails. The dad always ride the bike to place to get stuff and sell it to stores. They live in a small house. They made home made sausages.



Set in Melo, a godforsaken village near the Uruguay-Brazil border, the movie tracks the misfortunes of a dirt-poor petty smuggler named Beto (César Troncoso, resembling a less-exfoliated Omar Sharif). While his neighbors ecstatically prepare for a windfall from feeding the thousands of Brazilian faithful expected to attend the papal visit — one fearless entrepreneur even takes out a bank loan to buy sausage meat — Beto’s hopes rest on the opposite end of the digestive tract. If he builds a public convenience, who wouldn’t want to spend a peso?

Written and directed by Enrique Fernández and César Charlone, “The Pope’s Toilet” uses a seamless blend of professional and nonprofessional actors to take an oblique dig at a church that, the movie suggests, may have failed its most disadvantaged followers. Both filmmakers are Uruguayan (Mr. Fernández was born in Melo), so the hardscrabble details are touchingly credible, generating a tone of profound sadness — located most affectingly in the journalism-career dreams of Beto’s teenage daughter — that Mr. Charlone’s upbeat cinematography works hard to dispel. Despite the whimsical title, this is a movie that offers little in the way of relief, for villagers and audiences alike.

http://movies.nytimes.com/2009/04/08/movies/08pope.html


http://mnfilmtv.org/mndialog/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/stainless_steel_toilet_paper.jpg


http://i.thisislondon.co.uk/i/pix/2008/07/the-popes-toilet-243x212.jpg


http://www.mapsofworld.com/uruguay/maps/map-of-uruguay.jpg

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