SXSW Film Review: 'The Dance of Reality'

The fantastical director's first foray in 23 years is a family affair

Alejandro Jodorowsky's first feature in 23 years isn't in the same vein as the surrealistic, cinematic outliers of Chilean director halcyon era, but it's clearly a labor of mad, passionate love on the part of everyone involved.

Eschewing the phantasmagorical weirdness of El Topo and considerably less gaudy and blood-spattered than 1989's utterly unhinged Santa Sangre, The Dance of Reality is based on Jodorowsky's autobiography, and in particular his wild childhood. You could even go so far as to call it something of a family film, but then, really, what Jodorowsky film isn't?

Speaking of the Jodorowsky brood, the director's now-adult son Brontis ("The Boy" from El Topo plays his own father here. (What Freud would've had to say on the subject of Alejandro Jodorowsky's life and oeuvre makes the mind reel.) Jeremias Herskovits makes a fine stand-in as Jodo the younger. He's both a wildly imaginative child and the victim – sort of – of his domineering father. One harrowing sequence has the boy undergoing a trip to the dentist sans anesthetic, at his father's behest. "Now you are a Jodorowsky," the jubilant dad proclaims.

More linear and traditionally narrative than the madcap, Dada-esque hallucinogenics of the director's Seventies-era masterpieces, The Dance of Reality is nonetheless awash in Jodorowsky's singular vision: roving amputees, evil clowns, and a faceless beggar come and go along with dreamy sequences that eventually cohere into a plot you can actually follow. Try that with the director's first feature, Fando and Lis, and you'll get a migraine.

Set to a lovely, period-evocative score by yet another Jodorowsky progeny, son Adan, Dance of Reality is, at 130 minutes, crammed to bursting with the director's trademark magical realism. Occasionally marred by budgetary constraints, this is nevertheless a welcome return for an artist who truly deserves the sobriquet El Maestro.


The Dance of Reality


Visions, U.S. Premiere
Friday, March 14, 4:45pm, Alamo Ritz

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KEYWORDS FOR THIS POST

South by Southwest, SXSW, SXSW 2014, SXSW Film 2014, The Dance of Reality, Alejandro Jodorowsky, Brontis Jodorowsky, Pamela Flores, Adan Jodorowsky, Jeremias Herskovits

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