At the core of this indelibly moving film Chiles entry in the Oscar race for Best Foreign-Language feature is a performance of surpassing beauty and tenderness. Daniela Vega is the first openly transgender actress and model in Chile, and her portrayal of Marina Vidal, a trans woman who works as a waitress in Santiago to support her career as a cabaret singer, signals her as a world-class talent. With such cisgender actors as Eddie Redmayne (The Danish Girl), Jeffrey Tambor (Transparent) and Hillary Swank (Boys Dont Cry) scoring career triumphs in trans roles, its gratifying to watch Vega seize her moment with such subtle, stirring authenticity.
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Vega brings heart and soul to the movies heroine as she navigates a difficult quest to make the world accept her as she accepts and validates herself and director/co-writer Sebastin Lelio (Gloria) is with her every step of the way. Our first meeting with Marina shows her at her happiest. Her older boyfriend, 57-year-old Orlando (Francisco Reyes), has just treated Marina to a birthday dinner; shes recently moved into his apartment. Later, in bed, he suffers an aneurysm. His subsequent death, after a fall down the apartments stairwell, raises suspicions. Not just with the police a female detective (Amparo Noguera) subjects Marina to a humiliating strip search but with Orlandos family as well. His brother, Gapo (Luis Gnecco), offers some sympathy. But his ex-wife Sonia (Aline Kuppenheim) and grown son (Nicols Saavedra) are overtly hostile, forcing someone they think of as Orlandos dirty secret to vacate the premises and using threats to persuade Marina not to attend the funeral.
Vega lets
us see a woman who is not given space to express her grief or the compassion to
understand its necessity. Lelio goes
beyond condemning Marinas tormentors to decrying the patriarchal society that lets
hate grow and fester. Beautifully shot by cinematographer Benjamn Echazarreta, the movie slides into the surreal as Marina imagines herself
in a dance club, a glittering version of the
woman she longs to be. Yet in the harsh light of reality, she retains her poise and dignity in a world that wants to rob her of both.
Using Aretha Franklins You Make Me Feel Like a
Natural Woman on the soundtrack may seem too on-the-nose to express the
loss Marina feels with the death of Orlando. But Vega never makes a false move her portrayal digs deep and leaves you shaken. A Fantastic Woman catches a human being in the challenging
and exhilarating process of inventing herself. The result is unique and
unforgettable.
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