How I Spent My Summer Vacation
The odds are against him. So is everyone else.
Reunited after their collaboration on that breathless charge through Mayan disintegration Apocalypto, Mel Gibson relishes in restoring himself to action-hero duties in co-writer Adrian Grunberg’s directorial debut, How I Spent My Summer Vacation. Revisiting Central America, Gibson is an unnamed and ever-aliased career criminal, credited simply as ‘Driver’. After speeding headlong through the US border to Mexico with a dead accomplice, both dressed inexplicably as clowns, Driver promptly finds himself relieved of several million dollars in stolen cash by a group of unabashedly corrupt Mexican officials and accommodated indefinitely in El Pueblito. Thus begins his summer vacation in Tijuana.
El Pueblito is the captivating centrepiece of the film, a real-life prison which functions as a microcosmic and near post-apocalyptic reflection of criminal society. With authority devolved to local cartel kinpin Javi (Cacho), El Pueblito caters to all standard amenities: from ‘smack shacks’ to real-estate markets. Greasing the palms of officials even ensures that inmates can transplant their entire families into the rather esoteric prison ecosystem. Indeed, Driver comes to rely on a 9 year-old, named Kid (Hernandez), for a tutorial. Kid, it becomes apparent, is rather special; uniquely compatible with Javi’s rapidly deteriorating liver, his life ticks to the beat of Javi’s unremitting excess. And, with the victims of Gibson’s multi-million dollar theft on his trail, the plot entangles and the pace turns breakneck, setting the stage for Gibson, our reckless, charismatic and frequently self-serving anti-hero, to reel in the years with an-all-too timely reminder of everything he does best.
Bustled along by Antonio Pinto's Mariachi soundtrack and Gibson’s wry narration, How I Spent My Summer Vacation is expertly-delivered action. But it is not by-numbers. Through El Pueblito, Grunberg and Gibson explore an immersive, fascinating backdrop; as if spiking Lethal Weapon and Mad Max with a piquant dash of Apocalypto.
Eoin Dignan
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Screenings of this film:
2012/2013 Autumn Term – (35mm) |