Houston Chronicle

PORTUGUESE FANTASY IS INSPIRED LUNACY

- BY JUSTIN CHANG | LOS ANGELES TIMES

“Diamantino,” a new film written and directed by Gabriel Abrantes and Daniel Schmidt, is the funniest gender-bending, human-cloning refugee-crisis soccer comedy I’ve ever seen, and also the most thoughtful. It begins with intimation­s of the otherworld­ly, gazing serenely down at the Earth from outer space, then descends on a giant soccer stadium whose field is soon crawling with giant Pekingese puppies.

Those puppies are the joyous hallucinat­ion of a simple-minded Portuguese soccer star named Diamantino Matamouros (Carloto Cotta), fluffy good-luck charms that appear at the climactic moments of a match and guide him to victory. Before long, the puppies start to vanish, signaling the loss of his athletic mojo and his carefree spirit as he comes to realize what a deeply sad place the world can be.

Diamantino, whose uncanny resemblanc­e to the real-life soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo is likely no coincidenc­e, is rich, dumb and beautiful. But his greatest, least appreciate­d talent may well be his capacity for empathy. When his yacht crosses paths with a small boat carrying several African migrants, Diamantino is so pierced by their tragedy that he ends up costing Portugal the World Cup, collapsing in tears on the field and becoming a social-media laughingst­ock.

If I were to tell you that Diamantino loses his beloved father (Chico Chapas) the same night he loses the World Cup final, then rashly decides to quit soccer and adopt a “fugee,” you might well mistake this movie for a cringe-inducing exercise in First World bathos, or perhaps, an acid-tongued send-up of one. But nothing about “Diamantino” — from its inventive satire of sport, religion, celebrity and the media to its gently mocking but utterly sincere love for its hero — is quite so easy to nail down.

Part of this is due to the irreverent and eclectic sensibilit­y of Abrantes and Schmidt, longtime collaborat­ors who think nothing of mixing visual effects and 16-millimeter celluloid, or putting Donna Lewis’ “I Love You Always Forever” and Wagner’s “Das Rheingold” on the same soundtrack. But it also has to do with the sheer amount and variety of plot that they keep hurling at you, starting with Diamantino’s monstrous twin sisters (Anabela and Margarida Moreira), who spend every minute verbally abusing their little brother and conspiring to steal his fortune.

These schemes, which range from money laundering to having a mad scientist named Dr. Lamborghin­i (Carla Maciel) replicate his DNA, are thrown into jeopardy by the appearance of Rahim, Diamantino’s newly adopted son. Rahim, however, turns out to be not a boy from Mozambique but a female Portuguese secret-service agent named Aisha (Cleo Tavares), who has been spying on Diamantino along with her profession­al and romantic partner, Lucia (Maria Leite).

All this might make the movie sound like an unusually zany albeit topical riff on the holy-fool narrative, the tale of a beatific soul who is too stupid and too saintly for this world. The key difference is that Diamantino, who is valorized, ridiculed and exploited for his greatness, turns out to be a improbably great hero for his times as well as ours.

When the movie premiered last year at Cannes (where it won, among other things, the Palm Dog award for its canine performanc­es), it was widely received as a welcome blast of escapism, a departure from the worthy, solemn art cinema that proliferat­es at internatio­nal film festivals. But its madcap delirium can’t hide its insistent politics, its disdain for sham populism and its compassion for the disenfranc­hised. “Diamantino” is no less committed to these ideas than it is to its own uneven, unforgetta­ble lunacy.

 ?? Kino Lorber ??
Kino Lorber

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