Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

World of Hurt

Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu’s heart-wrenching Babel

Tragedy besets American tourist Richard (Brad Pitt) in the Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu film, Babel. (Murray Close/Paramount Classics)
Tragedy besets American tourist Richard (Brad Pitt) in the Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu film, Babel. (Murray Close/Paramount Classics)

The films Amores Perros and 21 Grams, from the union of director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu and writer Guillermo Arriaga, seem driven by a perpetual-motion machine designed for non-stop heart-wrenching; there are more emotional climaxes in each of these films than in a month of Dr. Phils. This is fine, but it’s a strange way to make movies: the feeling comes first; story, character, motivation — all that stuff is secondary.

And so Babel, the latest from the pair, is undeniably powerful, even overwhelming, though at the same time a little light and intellectually ungrounded. But being a film writer, I spend far too many hours in theatres feeling as emotionally inert as a root vegetable, so I love to be moved, even when the film’s mental landscape is suspiciously arid.

As per the chaos implied by the title, Babel is a swirling, chronologically skipping creation that takes place on several continents in several languages. Two young brothers, Yussef (Boubker Ait El Caid) and Ahmed (Said Tarchani), live in the mountains of Morocco in palpable poverty. With no books or signs of education anywhere, they spend their days herding goats in the mountains and selling animal skins; the boys’ futures seem utterly pre-determined. One day, sent to shoot jackals with their father’s new hunting rifle, they accidentally hit the window of a tour bus winding through the road far below. Susan (Cate Blanchett), a sphincter-clenched American tourist who uses her own cutlery in foreign restaurants, takes the bullet in the neck and her husband, Richard (Brad Pitt), struggles to save her on the dusty floor of a Berber hut.

Back in the couple’s tastefully wealthy home in San Diego, Mexican nanny Amelia (Adriana Barraza), takes their blonde children across the border for her son’s wedding. The kids are ecstatic partygoers, pinwheel-eyed at the raucous band and multi-tiered cake. But something sinister lingers: Amelia’s nephew, Santiago (Gael Garcia Bernal, in a torqued performance), drinks too much and twirls a gun on his finger, as if pointing toward some encroaching violence. The image of the gun takes the story to Tokyo where Chieko (Rinko Kikuchi), a deaf teenaged girl, is lashing out over her mother’s suicide with astonishing displays of sexuality: grabbing her dentist’s hand during a checkup and pulling it southward; removing her underwear and flashing teenaged boys.

Deaf-mute Chieko (Rinko Kikuchi) grapples with her emerging sexuality and her mother's suicide. (Tsutomu Umezawa/Paramount Classics)
Deaf-mute Chieko (Rinko Kikuchi) grapples with her emerging sexuality and her mother's suicide. (Tsutomu Umezawa/Paramount Classics)

Tired yet? There’s a whole lotta movie in Babel, and the sheer volume is exhausting at times. Inarritu seems to operate under the principle that movies as beautiful to behold as his own require almost no narrative (I tend to think narrative is a nice bonus). The closest thing to a unifying story in Babel is the idea of the butterfly effect of globalization: one person’s thoughtless action can cause tragic ripples around the globe. We are so linked now, and yet not linked at all, ever struggling to find that common tongue denied us since Babel.

Fragmented, disconnected, rafter-packed with actors, depressing: something smells Crash-y! And yet last year’s Oscar winner, Crash, with its spelled-out lecturing, was too gaggingly righteous to cause much feeling beyond smugness. The infinitely superior Babel struggles with the vastness of its subject, too, though it flails in an entirely different way: the film might be using too much of a whisper to say some of the same things Crash shouted.

The Moroccan incident is seized upon by the global media as an act of terrorism, amplifying the stakes for everyone involved. When the father of the Moroccan boys, Abdullah (Mustapha Rachidi), finds out his children are implicated in an international incident, an avalanche of feelings fall across his face until settling into fear. Babel is at its most potent when it narrows the broad topic of disconnection to parents and children: this film will gut anyone who has a child or has been close to one. It is a primal kind of terror to imagine that your children are crossing borders without your knowledge, let alone while you are bleeding out in another foreign country. “Home” is a fragile place in Babel, and around the world, it is crumbling.

Inarritu draws wonderful performances from his cast. Pitt’s marquee fame falls to the wayside; he looks worn, desperate. But the actors who are “unknowns,” to use an ironic tag in this context, are revelatory. Kikuchi is a perfectly furious teenager, hormones radiating like Pigpen’s dust plume. Barraza shoulders the burden of playing a stereotype — the good immigrant — with grace.

Eventually, though, Inarritu’s subtle touch becomes a liability. What are we to make of these expendable children, this wounded planet? Just showing us the wound doesn’t feel like enough. Because the film is so crowded, there is no time to really hear the stories of these characters, to question their motivations or examine the complications of their lives; the film is its own kind of babble. Richard and Susan are in Morocco because one of their children died, but this startling fact is a mere footnote, another layer of pain to skim across, just like terrorism, or illegal immigration. The pieces are gorgeous, but they don’t make a whole movie experience. Perhaps in his next film, Inarritu— so gifted — will still himself, and stay with one idea to its end. I walked away from Babel ragged, my emotions worked over, but my mind disturbingly calm.

Babel opens Nov. 3 in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, and in other major cities across Canada on Nov. 10.

Katrina Onstad writes about the arts for CBC.ca.

CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window.

More from this Author

Katrina Onstad

Character Assassination
Will Ferrell stars in Stranger Than Fiction
Good Year Tires
Ridley Scott's French folly
Crass Clown
Borat's humour — and hubris — is nothing short of devastating
World of Hurt
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's heart-wrenching Babel
Reading with Dick and Jane
Discussing the virtues of men's and women's magazines
Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

World »

Former Turkish PM buried
Tens of thousands of people gathered in the Turkish capital of Ankara on Saturday for the state funeral of former Turkish prime minister Bulent Ecevit.
November 11, 2006 | 11:48 AM EST
U.S. rep to the UN may not get Senate approval
The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations could become the second senior Bush official to lose his job in the wake of the Democratic sweep of Congress in midterm elections.
November 10, 2006 | 11:35 AM EST
Palestinian PM offers to step down to restore western aid
Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of the Palestinians' ruling Hamas group said he is prepared to resign his position if that's what it would take to get vitally needed western aid restored.
November 10, 2006 | 5:09 PM EST
more »

Canada »

Canadians honour war dead
People across Canada pause to mark Remembrance Day and honour the more than 100,000 Canadians killed in war and peacekeeping missions during the past century.
November 11, 2006 | 9:22 AM EST
Petition calling for state funeral for WWI veteran gaining steam
An online petition calling for a state funeral for the last veteran of the First World War is gaining momentum, organizers said Friday.
November 10, 2006 | 12:49 PM EST
2 teens guilty of manslaughter in senior's death
Two teenage boys were convicted of manslaughter Friday instead of murder in the beating death of an elderly Indo-Canadian man in Surrey's Bear Creek Park last year.
November 10, 2006 | 7:34 PM EST
more »

Health »

Googling may help doctors diagnose complex cases
Doctors who use the popular search engine Google to help diagnose tricky cases may find a correct diagnosis about 60 per cent of the time, Australian researchers have found.
November 10, 2006 | 11:48 AM EST
Chronic fatigue syndrome is a disease: CDC
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control has declared chronic fatigue syndrome a legitimate disease that doctors should take seriously.
November 10, 2006 | 7:36 PM EST
Rates of diabetes in Asia on rise, experts warn
Type 2 diabetes has reached epidemic levels in Asia, where younger people are being affected, experts say.
November 10, 2006 | 3:25 PM EST
more »

Arts & Entertainment»

Kylie Minogue returns after cancer battle
Australian pop singer Kylie Minogue took to the stage for a concert Saturday in Sydney for the first time since a bout with breast cancer.
November 11, 2006 | 12:44 PM EST
Hollywood tough guy Jack Palance dies
Square-jawed actor Jack Palance, who won an Oscar late in his career in the comedy City Slickers, died Friday. He was 87.
November 11, 2006 | 10:19 AM EST
Website preserves voices of Canada's WW I vets
Library and Archives Canada has launched a new website featuring interviews with Canada's veterans of the First World War.
November 10, 2006 | 1:53 PM EST
more »

Technology & Science »

Biometric ID cards coming for airport workers
The federal government will introduce biometric ID cards for workers at 29 major airports by the end of the year, Transport Minister Lawrence Cannon said Friday.
November 10, 2006 | 5:06 PM EST
Paperless office is pure fiction: report
A new report by Statistics Canada smashes the myth of the paperless office, finding instead that paper consumption has doubled over 20 years even as Canadians adopt new technologies.
November 10, 2006 | 1:38 PM EST
'Audio telescope' targets birds at airports
U.S. researchers have developed an audio telescope they say will help airports pinpoint the location of nearby birds.
November 10, 2006 | 12:27 PM EST
more »

Money »

Stelco warns of steel slump
Stelco is warning that it won't meet its targets for production, revenues or earnings because the steel market has weakened considerably in the past few months.
November 10, 2006 | 2:42 PM EST
Court ruling may delay Mackenzie pipeline hearings
The Federal Court of Canada has ruled in favour of a northern Alberta First Nation which felt it had not been adequately consulted on the multibillion-dollar Mackenzie Gas Project.
November 10, 2006 | 2:55 PM EST
Profit slips for Air Canada parent
Air Canada's parent, ACE Aviation Holdings has reported a drop in third-quarter profit to $103 million, in part because of a $102-million charge in connection with the redemption of Aeroplan miles issued before 2002.
November 10, 2006 | 2:41 PM EST
more »

Consumer Life »

Wal-Mart revives Christmas emphasis in holiday marketing
This holiday season, Wal-Mart is bringing "Christmas" back into its marketing, after several years of playing down the term.
November 10, 2006 | 9:53 AM EST
E-retailers, bill collectors reined in under proposed Quebec legislation
The Quebec government has announced plans to revise its consumer protection legislation, introducing strict new rules for online retailers and bill collectors.
November 10, 2006 | 11:27 AM EST
Sobeys apologizes after black widow bite
Sobeys has apologized to a Stratford, P.E.I., woman for the way it dealt with her call after she was bitten by a black widow spider she found in grapes she bought from one of its stores.
November 10, 2006 | 11:06 AM EST
more »

Sports »

Scores: NHL CFL MLB

Hurting Leafs host Canadiens
The Toronto Maple Leafs will try to win without their captain and starting goaltender Saturday when they host the Montreal Canadiens (CBC, 7 p.m. ET).
November 11, 2006 | 11:48 AM EST
Kiprusoff, Luongo duel in Vancouver
Two of the top goalies in the NHL, Miikka Kiprusoff and Roberto Luongo, will face off against each other when the Vancouver Canucks host the Calgary Flames on Saturday (CBC, 10 p.m. ET).
November 11, 2006 | 11:15 AM EST
Sandhu wins bronze at Cup of China
Emanuel Sandhu won bronze Saturday and will return to his Burnaby, B.C., training base with Canada's only medal from the Cup of China figure skating meet.
November 11, 2006 | 1:01 PM EST
more »