mgoazul007
Do not waste 80 minutes plus of your life watching this dog of a self indulgent, narcissistic movie. The marvel of this film is NOT just that it is excessively overdone , self indulgent, narcissistic, boring ( you will NOT get that lost time back, folks) it is that this amateurish, selfish, docu-flick actually got funding from the several sources it managed to get funding from, that it was allowed to have a "space" in theaters to show such drivel. Look, if you had a nickel- spoiler alert- for every person who wanted to be a dancer/ film star/ film maker/ director/ entertainer/singer , etc. who ended up not making it and then either felt like dying, giving up or committing suicide you would..literally ..be a billionaire! Not only is this a story of someone without talent who couldn't cut it in the "biz" , above, who then throws in towel and offs herself, its about her kid sister the actual director and yup true narcissism here playing as "actor" in the movie as both her sis and herself. "Look at Me" I'm a movie director folks who suckered people into funding this crappy, boring, selfish narcissist no doubt because she had an over rated, over priced corrupt "Ivy league cartel" moxie. Basta! Enough already. There are thousands of movies on that subject- defeated dreams , suicide, quitters- that are far better that have NEVER SEEN the light of day and by people who are less about "craving the wrong kind of attention" like this..ahem 'director" and(alleged) "actor" So many people with SAG cards do not selfishly kill themselves or whine about someone who they know & love who was depressed, sad, or suicidal who we know tried to kill themselves, decided not to , or who did it . This movie is nothing new but it is LOUSY. A waste of one's precious time regardless of your age because...no pun intended ..Life is just too short to waste your afternoon watching a story that has zippo(nada) to do with a more compelling story..those who carry on once their dreams die as is , face it, so often the case in this most superficial, materialistic, priorities askew, plasti9c, shallow US culture/ society. Incredible as in "not credible" that it actually got funding from some top arts corps. Let's hope this selfish narcissistic lacking in talent Director does not, sadly, follow in her defeated big sister's footsteps and upon rejection, kill herself, too. You don't make it? Wait Tables, wash dishes at 2 in the morning at the Clock restaurant to put bread on the table for your 3 kids. Now THAT is a story, THAT is a Documentary with some potential; THAT takes courage and yup, THAT is life. There is literally nothing redeeming about this sub par waste of time & film.
Daniela Lima
It's a beautiful documentary that shows how are extremely strong the connection between women in the same family. It is sad at the same time, impossible not to shed tears. It has absolutely nothing to do with the review above, that says that it is an ode to narcissism. Petra managed to merge the three (mother, daughter and sister) in an incredible and poetic way. The art direction is also beautiful. The way the mother describes her despair feelings just using words is also perfect. The soundtrack is one of the most beautiful I've heard in any documentary. The documentary is worth n many ways, as we can see ourselves in several situations.
lhzamarioli
The movie/documentary should not be named Elena, but Petra. Elena is, as we can see along the movie, a mere "ghost" to the writer's own psychological questions. A very unoriginal interpretation of teenage doubts, spiced with a nauseating narcissism and a pretension of "artistry" stolen from Elena's profession. As I was discussing with friends, we were in doubt if it was a better movie because it was based on a real story. We decided it was ONLY a movie because it was based on real facts, otherwise it would be the most boring, pointless story ever written. In general, aside of some clichés, the direction was OK. I can see some of the scenes making a beautiful movie, if inserted in a relevant story (and not in a pseudo-poetry of disconnected floating women for how long? really?).P.s.: And if you watched the trailer made by some Brazilian actors: the movie has absolutely NOTHING to do with that. It will NOT talk about Elena. Nor her life. Nor her relationships. She will remain as a metaphoric idea, not a role.
Camilo Vannuchi
She was beautiful. She liked dancing, did theater in São Paulo, Brazil, and dreamed of being a Hollywood actress. When she turned 13, she got a video camera—and a sister. They became a real twosome in experimentations. As an adolescent, Elena spent a lot of time creating short films and took special care directing little Petra in the scenes she invented. She was demanding and believed in her sister's potential to meet with her raptures as precocious director. For five years, she acted in some of the best São Paulo theater productions. She also auditioned for a few film and TV parts. She was never called. Elena was 20 years old when, at the start of 1990, she moved to New York to further her studies in performing arts and strive for her chance in the American market. Out of place, anxious, frustrated after some unsuccessful acting auditions, disappointed over the lack of recognition and overtaken by a depression that deepened with the lack of perspectives, Elena committed suicide in the second half of the year. Petra was 7. Twenty years later it is she, the baby sister, who returns to New York to retrace her sister's last steps, look through her archives and transform her memories into images and poetry. ELENA is a film about a sister who departs and a sister who stays. It's a film about searching, loss, missing, but also, about finding, about legacy, what is passed on, memory. A film about Petra's Elena and Elena's Petra, about what remained of one in the other, and essentially, a film about delicateness/affection. In the competitive Brasilia Film Festival, ELENA was outstanding among the participating documentaries. It won four prizes: Audience Award for Best Documentary, Best Film Directing, Best Art Direction, and Best Editing. Along this year, ELENA may not be in the spotlights, but is at par with and surpasses some of the films presented by the best Brazilian filmmakers. And it indicates a promising path for the future documentary: taking to the screen personal stories in which affection is more relevant than reporting, and substituting the staid, overworked tone of traditional biographies by an involving mosaic of sounds and images, forms and content, research and delirium. The first feature film by Petra Costa, also director of the short "Olhos de Ressaca" ("Undertow Eyes"), the new ELENA is built of old fragments, dug up by Petra from what was left by her sister: home videos, excerpts from a diary registered by Elena on audio tapes, old pictures that have undergone the ravages of two decades in oblivion. It is also a film that shows, in recent images, the course taken by Petra to rediscover Elena: accounts by family and friends, an emotional and deeply human message by her mother, a visit made by the production team to the house and the hospital where the tragic end happens. Once the film finishes, the spectator continues without knowing the acting of Elena in front of the cameras in 1990. Now, under the precise direction of her younger sister, she finally triumphs on the screen. "Of uncommon beauty, the film stays with us for a long time", wrote about it the filmmaker Walter Salles. "It provokes 60 insights per minute", said film director Fernando Meirelles. To let yourself be taken in by the insights, involve yourself with Elena for as long as it takes, is a must. (by Camilo Vannuchi, published in Brazilian site Época São Paulo in October 2012)