Film-Philosophy
Journal | Salon | Portal (ISSN 1466-4615)
Vol. 8 No. 16, May 2004
Dorna Khazeni
Rodrigo Bellot's _Sexual Dependency_
_Sexual
Dependency_ Directed by Rodrigo
Bellot Bolivia, 2003 _Sexual Dependency_ is the
first feature film directed by 25-year-old Bolivian director
Rodrigo Bellot. It is an ambitious and intricate debut. The
story takes place partly in Santa Cruz, a major Bolivian
city, and partly in Ithaca, New York. While at first the
film may appear to be a zippy account of macho swagger and
the sexual escapades of horny young men in both South
America and the US, it is in fact a thought-provoking
political essay examining the consequences of consumerist
culture on sexual identity and social
interactions. The film begins as
Jessica, an attractive teen, ends her school day. She and a
friend make plans to meet at the friend's 'Quincanera', a
customary sweet fifteen party where parents celebrate a
girl's passing from childhood to womanhood. As she leaves
school a young man shyly hands her a love note. Once home,
Jessica faces her abusive father, while her barely visible
submissive mother lurks in the kitchen. Suspecting her of
starting to sleep around, the father rails at her. *Her
looks are to be her ticket out of the poverty the rest of
them live in and aren't to be wasted on anyone in this
neighborhood. If she gets pregnant she will blow her
chance.* At the Quincanera, while
the far less polished boy from school looks on dejectedly in
the background, Jessica is seduced by a rich young man on a
bender with his buddies, out for a night of partying. Their
stated goal for the night is to 'bury the snake' -- a quaint
Bolivian idiom that he successfully realizes. What we see of
his and Jessica's union is anything but wonderful. Although,
to begin with, Jessica is struck by her suitor's suave
appearance, when faced with the prospect of sex, she appears
first reticent and then, when she submits,
resigned. There is so much sex in
this film, but the adjective that would best describe all of
it is 'joyless'. The sex is never fun. It is always
motivated by things other than affection, let alone love. At
best it is selfish, and at worst a violation. Jessica has
sex with the young man who crashes the Quincanera.
Sebastien, the same young man's cousin, visiting from
Colombia, is abandoned to the care of friends, then taunted
and bullied into having sex with a sad, sagging, prostitute.
Choco, another character, feels compelled to prove his
masculinity by scoring a beautiful fair-haired and
fair-skinned married Brazilian woman in a
nightclub. This night of the
Quincanera will change the course of Jessica's life. The
young man has sought gratification for his immediate
desires. The currencies available to him are his clean good
looks coupled with the smooth edges that money can buy,
especially in a country as poor as Bolivia. Jessica's father's attempt
earlier to protect her virginity stems from his
understanding of the social and economic realities they live
in; in this reality her sexuality is a valuable currency.
Her virginity is going to be worth something, to her, to
him, to the family. It may be her ticket out. Understanding
how the society works is one thing. Believing its logic, and
basing his actions on this dubious logic, makes the father
party to the socio-economic forces at play. Within this
social model that dehumanizes people and that uses them as
products or as ways to place products, people become a means
to an end. There can be no winners; not Jessica, not her
father, not even Tyler, the blonde, white, sex symbol whose
image graces the huge advertising billboard that looms high
above the dusty street corner where Jessica catches her bus
home from school. The billboard is an ad for
RigoBossD underwear. It is an ad a la Calvin Klein -- think
'Obsession' -- that shows a handsome, muscular, young
demi-god, flaunting his body as two slender underwear-clad
nymphs stand around in the background. The ad implies this
young man has it all: good looks, a great body, and not one
but two women. This ad is in fact the true source of the
ills laid out in the course of __Sexual Dependency__. It is
what links First World economic interests to the lives of
Bellot's characters in Santa Cruz: a dynamic built upon
constantly creating and feeding false desire. Desire as a commodity is
marketed and mass-produced. Purchasing power defines how
close you can get to being the ideal man or woman. Can you
or can you not buy lots of RigoBossD clothes and underwear?
This is it in a nutshell. But will this one pair of
underwear make you the perfect man? Therein lies the catch
that drives the bulimic economy of desire. The characters in
_Sexual Dependency_ merely illustrate this machinery in the
course of the film. The billboard looms in the background
and the action unfolds before it. The model who looks down
on his dusty street corner in Bolivia is Tyler, a football
player at Ithaca College. The ad is banking on the premise
that men looking up at the picture on the billboard would
like to be Tyler, handsome, huge, and in the company of
scantily-clad members of the opposite sex. The ad also works
on the presumption that women would like to be the sexy
mavens gravitating in the demigod's orbit. But back in the
real world of the film's narrative, it turns out that Tyler
is not the hetero demi-god he is projected to be. He is gay
but feels obliged to fake and plays straight. He represses
his inclinations and masquerades as something he isn't for
fear that the angel-faced testosterone-charged ball players
in the locker room, his posse, may find out his true
sexuality and may at best reject and humiliate him or at
worst exercise some form of violence on him. He seeks safety
by posing as one of them. The steamy locker room becomes a
version of hell that Tyler, perennially aroused and afraid,
fills with stolen glances and repressed longing. In the fourth of the
film's five chapters, Adina, an articulate young black woman
in Ithaca, delivers a powerful monologue that traces her own
evolution. She starts off wanting to be desired and ends up
reaching a place where she is transformed into who she is
today. Adina's monologue, a powerful and hypnotic text, is
the key to the film. Bellot succeeds in fusing
the backbone of the stories told up to this point to the
subtext of Adina's monologue. She speaks about a mirror
given to her grandmother (or great grandmother?) by her
slave owners. Beneath the surface of her words simmers the
narrative of abuse practiced over generations, abuse that
was condoned and codified. She says the mirror's frame was
covered with the white faces of little cherubs. The mirror
had been passed down to her. Adina's monologue is delivered
in a room where another, ordinary mirror, reflects her image
as she speaks at length about 'the' mirror, and about the
white cherubs that framed it. As she speaks, the past
and several layers of the present merge to give a seemingly
ordinary image -- her face in a mirror in her room -- much
depth. In this, today's mirror, gone are the cherubs that
framed the other mirror. By connecting the plain prop in
Adina's room with the loaded mirror of Adina's story, Bellot
is able to create resonance and impregnate an anodyne object
with the weight of history that is present in Adina's
narrative. Adina is the first and
only character to speak up and to speak her mind. She can
tell her story. She can speak her mind because she has the
talisman of language. *Because* she has a voice, she has
power. Adina is empowered because she understands that
conflict has forged the moment and the place that she is
standing in. It is true that she becomes a victim of
violence and hence, indirectly, of the same machinery that
victimizes the Bolivian characters -- the same machinery
that encourages men to want to be the mythical towering
demi-gods so like the boys in the locker room. But she dares
to defy their sense of entitlement. And although she is
violated, she is also invincible because she has discovered
an immutable core to her that they can not touch. She has
something they don't have. She has a voice and an identity
that is her own. It is not given to her from a billboard.
Adina's monologue becomes an appeal for advocacy, for
language and for communication. This is what can challenge
violence and the power structures that breed
violence. The film is shot digitally
by Bellot and another operator on two cameras. Visually
gifted, Bellot is able to spin images off the ideas he is
exploring. He has chosen to use a split screen to tell his
story and his use of it is seamless and original. At times,
the same shot spills from one screen into another, at other
times the same scene is played out with a slight nuance of
perspective. He strums and riffs an image or sequence until
he has squeezed the last drop out of it, like the face of
Jessica's friend whose birthday it is, or the many jig-sawed
images of the prostitute Sebastien has sex with. The
decision to abandon the split screen in the film's harrowing
final sequence restores to the large single screen all its
force and depth and impact, almost spelling out the
difference visually between a large and small image,
distraction and focus, in an audience's visual
experience. The characters move around
one another in an odd temporal waltz in the clever and
dizzyingly choppy time-frame Bellot sets up. We move forward
and then sometimes slip back a few hours to view the setup
to an event from a different perspective. The cast is made up of
non-professionals all of whom perform with great grace. This
includes members of the Ithaca College football team who, to
the director's credit, perform with an uncanny naturalness
verging on verite. The locker room scenes, with their focus
on the male body, generate the kind of eroticism that one
has experienced with mind-numbing regularity at movies that
focus on the naked female body. The men's physicality is on
display in a way that is refreshingly uninhibited and
gorgeous. But the images also carry an inherent violence.
Because throughout the film eroticism has been twisted into
mutations of simple pleasure, the erotic undertones carry
with them a note of foreboding, foreshadowing the brutality
inherent in these men. Further, these locker room images
lend a new resonance to Adina's meditation on the cherubs
framing the old mirror. The white cherubs she describes
necessarily bring to mind the angel-faced athletes whose
conduct is demonic and savage. Bolivia is the poorest
country in Latin America. Centuries of colonialism have
resulted in a Westernized dominant ruling class who are
affluent and light-skinned. This Westernized elite dominates
economically. There is no trickle-down economic benefit to
the urban poor or the huge indigenous population (45 percent
of the eight million inhabitants). While this background is
critical to the context of _Sexual Dependency_, the film's
strength stems from the fact that it succeeds in identifying
the issues outlined in underdeveloped Bolivia and
demonstrating that they not only exist in first world North
America, they originate there. The film is about the
commodification of desire and its mutation into a 'fix'. The
product is the desire that advertisers, corporations, and
manufacturers are banking on as they create their products
and their advertising for those products. They succeed in
creating a desire to own something you don't have, and to be
someone you are not. In turn, they promise to make you
desirable. This linking of buying power to desirability
creates a feeding cycle that not only leaves the end user
permanently hungry, it breeds self-hatred and, necessarily,
violence. It is the impact of this phenomenon on sexual and
social identity in modern society that is at the core of
this film's expose. Obviously, the cycles of domination and
exploitation are not unique to Bolivia because of its
history of colonialization and its culture of machismo.
While in Bolivia the violence is an undercurrent, in Ithaca
College it is codified and ritualized. Going by the oblique and
at times dazzling narrative of _Sexual Dependency_, the
state of things is very grim indeed in the world.
Nonetheless, Bellot's analysis ends on a note of strength
and hope that with knowledge and education will come a
voice, and to those who have a voice freedom will
come. Los Angeles, California,
USA Copyright ©
Film-Philosophy 2004 Dorna Khazeni, 'Rodrigo
Bellot's _Sexual Dependency_', _Film-Philosophy_, vol. 8 no.
16, May 2004
<http://www.film-philosophy.com/vol8-2004/n16khazeni>. Join the _Film-Philosophy_
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