Pen pals
Central Station runs on schedule
by Peter Keough
CENTRAL STATION. Directed by Walter Salles. Written by João Emanuel Carneiro and
Marcos Bernstein. With Fernanda Montenegro, Marilia Pêra, Vinicius de
Oliveira, Sôia Lira, Othon Bastos, Otávio Augusto, and Stela
Freitas. A Sony Classics release. At the Avon.
Don't take taxis, the old woman advises the motherless boy in
her charge. Take the bus -- buses always take the same route, but they never
get lost. Brazilian director Walter Salles's earnest and efficient tearjerker
Central Station, which garnered Oscar nominations for Best Foreign Film
and Best Actress, is the kind of movie that takes the bus. Sentimental but with
the kind of restraint Hollywood could learn from, it pushes all the familiar
buttons but with such slickly neo-realistic style, such detached and exacting
detail, and such a masterful performance at its heart, that passengers are
grateful for the ride.
That performance is from veteran Brazilian actress Fernanda Montenegro. She
plays Dora, a retired teacher with a lived-in satchel of a face who makes ends
meet by writing letters for the illiterate at the Rio de Janeiro railway
terminal of the title. An opening montage showing her customers venting their
souls, thirsting for the power of the word (many of them are actual denizens of
the station), suggests another appeal the profession has for her. Although she
demonstrates little emotion beyond distaste as she jots down their outpourings,
she later takes the letters home to her cramped apartment and shares them with
her friend Irene (Marilia Pêra), a far more amusing pastime than offered
by her antique black-and-white TV. With Olympian disdain, she pierces the
illusions of the correspondents and, like one of the Fates, decides which
letters shall go into the wastebasket, which into the drawer to be mailed
"later."
One of those consigned to the latter begins ominously, "Dear Jesús, You
were the worst thing that ever happened to me." It's from a plucky single
mother with a sullen 10-year-old in tow who's trying to track down the drunkard
who left her. She claims it's because their son, Josué (Vinicius de
Oliveira), wants to see him. Dora confides to Irene that the woman really wants
to see the crumb-bum herself, but all that becomes moot when the woman heads
back to Dora's stand the next day to soften her missive's rhetoric and is
flattened by a bus.
Dora is drawn to the motherless Josué, partly from moribund compassion
but mostly from greed. The deceptively avuncular Pedrão (Otávio
Augusto), who's shown in one brutal allusion to The Bicycle Thief
pursuing and dispatching a shoplifter, offers her a tidy sum to give
Josué to a local adoption agency, which, he claims, puts kids in wealthy
homes in the United States and Europe.
Indeed it does, but as Dora learns after splurging on a new TV, the kids are
sent to those homes in pieces -- the agency murders its wards and collects on
their donated organs. Her conscience spurred, Dora rescues Josué and
flees with him to search the countryside for his father.
Hers seems an abrupt conversion, but Montenegro conveys it with such
matter-of-fact annoyance and determination that you don't doubt her for an
instant. Neither is her bonding with the waif mawkish or overtly manipulative.
Far from the massed faces and bodies of the city in the bleak vacancy of the
rural landscape, Montenegro is nuanced and gritty as Dora airs out her soul,
allowing herself to feel at first affection for her companion, then fierce love
and loyalty as they scramble for money, hitch rides, bicker and embrace, and,
of course, take the bus as they track down one dead-end lead after another.
Do they find Jesús? Salles doesn't underplay the religious subtext
of his tale, and the results range from the clumsily obvious to the
unexpectedly moving. Naming Josué's stepbrothers Moisés and
Isaias and making his father a carpenter don't add much subtlety, but footage
of an actual candlelit festival of the Blessed Virgin evokes the primitive and
threatening extremes of the spirit, the convulsive and incandescent longing for
salvation. And in one of the film's more heartbreaking moments, Dora attempts
with a borrowed lipstick to pretty herself up and woo a burly, born-again
trucker who gives them a ride.
For the most part, though, the religious motifs -- like Salles's half-baked
symbolism of a wooden top and a lost handkerchief -- serve only as window
dressing for his limpid road movie, distracting from the bereft scenery outside
and the even more harrowing faces of the pair passing through it. Central to
the film is its universal tale of faith, of striving and persisting in love
before the inevitability of solitude and death. When Salles sticks to that
itinerary, Dora and Josué's stations of the cross prove a ritual
worth following.