Hawaii

Kilian Melloy READ TIME: 2 MIN.

With his latest film, "Hawaii," Argentinian filmmaker Marco Berger ("Plan B," "Sexual Tension: Volatile") revisits the realm of male passion, as two men -- childhood friends who haven't see one another in years -- gradually connect and dance uncertainly around each other.

Mart�n (Mateo Chiarino) returns to his old neighborhood after a long absence, only to find that his aunt has departed and sold her house. He has nowhere to go: Since the death of his mother, when he was 13, Mart�n has been living in Uruguay with another relative. But with her death, he has no place to go until the end of the summer months, when he's got a job lined up in Buenos Aires.

Mart�n lives rough for a while, sleeping in the bushes and hiring out for odd jobs to bring in a little cash. When he approaches Eugenio (Manuel Vignau), who tends a house for his aunt and uncle, the two recognize one another from when they were kids. Eugenio offers Mart�n steady employment for a couple of months and, when he realizes the extent of Mart�n's desperation, a place to stay.

But Eugenio's kindness carries the possibility of complication. He's gay, and worried about drawing Mart�n into a romance with no future -- or, worse, some sort of "gay for pay" scenario. But Eugenio's feelings only get stronger with each passing day; will their connection lead to something real? Or is he only setting himself up to have his illusions shattered?

Berger's approach here, as in earlier films, is to allow the film to flex, breathe, and amble. The guys swim, nap side by side in the sun, share meals, and have borderline erotic experiences (sleeping together in a drunken heap at one point). Each seems to be uncertain of the other: Is Mart�n gay? Are Eugenio's motives less pure than they might be, and what's with the way he'll suddenly jump up, in the middle of a conversation, and get onto his computer?

Chiarino plays Mart�n with a certain stripe of innocence that's appealing, but seems a little too good to be true. Vignau's depiction of Eugenio is of someone with borderline Asperger's -- he seldom manages a smile, and he often seems wound way too tight, but on the other hand, he notes subtle clues about Mart�n that allow him to figure out the starkness of his new friend's circumstances, and he finds ways of looking after Mart�n that seem engineered to allow Mart�n to retain his masculine pride. When Eugenio does crack a smile, however, it's directly because of Mart�n; for all his uncertainty, it's obvious that his feelings for Mart�n are genuine, if understated.

In this, and other ways, Berger imbues "Hawaii" with a certain realism, even as its central metaphor seems altogether too much like a fable. The balance Berger strikes is one of sweetness and youthful optimism.


by Kilian Melloy , EDGE Staff Reporter

Kilian Melloy serves as EDGE Media Network's Associate Arts Editor and Staff Contributor. His professional memberships include the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, the Boston Online Film Critics Association, The Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association, and the Boston Theater Critics Association's Elliot Norton Awards Committee.

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