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  3. Was anyone else bothered by the narrations?

Was anyone else bothered by the narrations?

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    #21

    boonjj — 15 years ago(February 25, 2011 02:16 PM)

    the narration is one of the best things about the film
    one bit that stood out to me for whatever reason was the narration over the man with his family, on his boat in the night time. "he would start his own business, but it would fail due to breaking new laws on owning a company. In 2 years time he will be a cleaner for a hotel. He will not fish again"
    paraphrasing..
    it really gives the film a whole new layer, showing that altho the story we're watching is about these 3 people, this is just 1 story and everybody has their own. it gave me a very strange feel, like nostaliga and beauty. it made me sad and happy at the same time 🙂

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      droptoonswatchacid — 14 years ago(May 28, 2011 01:16 AM)

      The narration was beautiful, haunting, and overall effective.
      I'm glad that someone mentioned Godard
      Pack your bags we're going to Memphis.

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        saucyminxx — 13 years ago(July 15, 2012 02:30 PM)

        Though I usually don't like narrations, in this film I thought they were beautiful. Sometimes just nonsense but it gave us a better glimpse of the characters lives.
        Like the one where he talks about what the boys do in the bathroom in the other ones house. It was important cause it showed us how they really felt about eachother. Julio possibly showing a bit more respect and Tenoch looking down at Julios family cause they are poorer. We wouldn't know about these things if it weren't for the narrator.
        Also I can kill you with my brain

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          GuyOnTheLeft — 13 years ago(November 04, 2012 01:55 AM)

          I sort of cut the narration some slack (even though it didn't always work for me) because I think it would likely come across better for a fluent Spanish speaker watching without subtitles.
          See a list of my favourite films here: http://www.flickchart.com/slackerinc

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            Suskis — 12 years ago(July 25, 2013 02:27 AM)

            It took me a while to like the narration voice, but, in the end, it turns out being totally part of the story. It adds a deep layer that changes the value of many things we see.
            Every time we are told about something "unnecessary", we are actually given proof of how in life things happen, just like how we see antything else in the movie.
            'What has been affirmed without proof can also be denied without proof.' (Euclid)

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              #26

              solatisa — 12 years ago(March 26, 2014 09:31 AM)

              Although I found the muting of the scenes and narration to be a bit odd at first - if only for the reason that each time the sound muted before the narration began, it took me out of the movie because I thought there was a audio error. That being said.
              I really enjoyed this unique method of film narration. It served multiple functions for me: the conversation was muted to show that although this is just one story, there is a larger world out there and the viewer gets an omnipotent viewpoint of the country, politics, and world. It was also interesting because the dialog conflicted with reality. As the characters said one thing, the sound of their world cut off and the reality of that scene and it's ramifications were introduced. I liked it, but I totally understand why other would not.

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                ValeriaMessalina — 11 years ago(April 06, 2014 01:40 PM)

                I was not bothered by the narration at all, in fact I thought that it helped the film show a whole different layer outside of "two teen boys go on a sexually charged trip with an older woman." In fact, I have found over the years that much of South American art has a class/social undertone to it and I thought the narration helped bring that to light, amongst other things. The migrant worker story, all servants being indigenous versus all rich/elites being light-skinned/European ancestry, the police used as a weapon in the class warfare against poor people, most rural people being indigenous (another example that comes to mind immediately is the Motorcycle Diaries, although I haven't seen that in many years). And this isn't just about Mexico, from what I have understood this holds true of many countries south of the USA. Two examples that I've personally come in contact with through family/friends have been Peru and Bolivia, they are stratified much the same way, European-ancestry/light-skinned elite/rich, indigenous servants/farmers/poor. Was it obvious to any South Americans/latinos/Mexicans? I'm Russian and this spoke volumes to me, maybe because I'm somewhat familiar with the history/context of the region, although I have never actually been there in person.

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                  liv911 — 9 years ago(January 07, 2017 12:05 AM)

                  i really liked the narrations! but the way it was done bothered me.
                  i don't think it affected my oppinion of the film, the narrations made it more intresting if anything, but it was annoying cause i never got used to it so i would always think that the sound was buffering or something like that.

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