Lives have many cycles
but mine has only turned once and not completely...
the most important thing is missing.
In 2004 Todd Solondz wrote
and directed Palindromes
to mixed reviews, but for a more satisfying use
of palindromes, check out Julio Medem's Lovers
of the Arctic Circle (Los
Amantes del Círculo Polar)—a 1998
film finally arriving in U.S. markets through Home
Vision Entertainment eight years later. The film's
circuitous route to DVD release oddly seems appropriate
to the film's metaphysical message about how love
and fate intertwine across time and space.
A palindrome is a word or
phrase that is spelled the same forwards and backwards.
This describes the names of the two main characters—Otto
and Ana—as well as reflects the theme and structure
of the film itself. Everything is connected throughout.
Events at the beginning of the film affect what
happens at the end, yet the ending may have affected
how all the events unfold all along. Aspiring romantic
and metaphysical thinkers/lovers/poets all can find
satisfaction in Medem's work.
Otto and Ana are seen at
three main periods of their lives—children, adolescents,
and young adults. The film does considerable "time
tripping" (akin to Slaughterhouse Five),
but ingenious editing and clever transitions flow
easily throughout its 112 minute cycle. The children
first meet by chance in the woods and become instantly
attached to each other. Soon after, Otto sends out
paper airplanes with a romantic message that leads
to his father and Ana's mother meeting and falling
in love with each other.
Ana becomes Otto's step-sister,
but when adolescent hormones kick in, the two become
lovers—and Otto frequently slips into Ana's bed
at night. Miraculously their relationship remains
a secret from their parents. They seem destined
for each other, but fate intervenes to separate
them when Otto's mother dies. They nearly meet in
a Spanish cafe, but it's not to be until the star
crossed lovers are both drawn to Finland and the
Arctic Circle.
Mere plot details don't
begin to explore the depths that Medem explores
here. Using three sets of actors for the various
ages, he digs deeply into their characters. Young
Otto wonders how he got his name, and its explanation
leads to a fascinating WWII anecdote that adds brush
strokes to Life's meaning; it also circuitously
ties additional plot threads together that draws
both lovers to an ultimately peaceful place. The
entire plot hinges upon co-incidence, yet demonstrates
that things like errantly kicked soccer balls, paper
airplane flights, and fender benders with public
transport were meant to be.
Primarily we follow the
children to understand their characters through
various chapters alternating between "Otto" and
"Ana" before getting to a later chapter called "Otto/Ana."
The director's son, Peru Medem, plays Otto as a
child while Sara Valiente plays young Ana. While
the seamless editing greatly assists the transitions
between time periods, credit must also be given
to the actors that portray the older versions: the
adolescents by Victor Hugo Oliveira and Kristel
Diaz, and the young adults by Fele Martínez and
Najwa Nimri.
American audiences expecting
a traditional Hollywood ending may be frustrated
with the film's "ambiguous" finale, but the ending
really isn't all that difficult to understand for
anyone following the visual clues. The film opens
with a scene showing one of the lovers being reflected
in the eye of the other—a puzzle at the beginning
that poetically ties together at the end. Medem
refuses to dumb down the presentation to craft one
of the most beautiful romances in recent memory.
Lovers of the Arctic Circle
would make a great companion film to Richard Linklater's
recent Before Sunset—a
contrast between a highly visual treatment vs. a
highly verbal treatment of love and fate. Both are
intelligent films that are deeply moving and satisfying
explorations into the Zen of love.
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