Acne is a remarkably clever and subtle film about poverty. On the surface it looks like the opposite, but the impoverishment conveyed in this movie is not easily visible to the naked eye, or at least, this film explores a common type of poverty we would not normally recognise.
The central character is Rafa, a middle class teen with severe acne which is a nuisance to him and for which he receives medical attention, but it does not affect his confidence. He is softly spoken, his voice is childlike and he never shouts or displays bad temper, but he is clearly spoilt and has everything he wants including money whenever he asks for it. None of Rafa's many privileges which he uses to the full and which he takes for granted seems able to raise him out of a monotonous, disconnecting lack of engagement (this could be an early manifestation of depression). His only fixation and his search throughout the film is for the closeness contained in a proper kiss.
This film was, I first thought, an interesting observation on the malaise of privilege, but it is more than that. Rafa is a victim of middle class poverty, a sufferer from a fairly frequent form of abuse; that of middle class deprivation. He is a casualty of emotional abandonment by his divorcing parents who think the comfortable life style and freedoms they provide for him are enough. Rafa's parents only understand monetary value, they seem unable to provide the time and love all children need. When Rafa goes to help his dad at his business, he spends his time working alone in a warehouse, while his dad works in the office.
The emptiness of his life is brought into sharp focus when the closest Rafa comes to sharing something with his father is when he goes into the same brothel he has just seen his dad has come out of. This flips the whole film from the two dimensional surface story depicting the overindulged restlessness of Rafa, to the deeper narrative depicting the tragedy, loss and neglect of the teen by his egocentric, self-centred and self-absorbed parents.
Plot summary
Rafa, a teenage boy who is just edging into his teens tries to unravel the mysteries of love and sex in this coming-of-age story. He is mired in the lower depths of adolescence; his skin is breaking out, he feels incredibly awkward, and he can't get women off his mind. While his older brother tries to help by arranging him to lose his virginity to a cooperative neighborhood woman, he is still mortified after the big seduction that he hasn't actually kissed a girl, and he and his pals Andy and Rony struggle to make sense of the fair sex. While they occasionally visit a neighborhood brothel where the working girls offer various forms of sympathy, they'd rather be spending time with the girls from their school, and Rafa sets his sights on Nicole, who is pretty enough that nearly everyone is convinced he doesn't stand a chance with her.
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A STUDY OF COLD POVERTY WRAPPED IN ICY GOLD
5.7 rating is for a reason
This is a kid who gets all the money he wants (he can even wake his parents up in the middle of the night to ask for money, no problem),who goes regularly to brothels at age 13, who takes piano, tennis and karate lessons and doesn't seem to enjoy neither. And we are supposed to care for him because he has a fierce acne attack (for which, after seeing several specialists, he is taking the most expensive medicine in the market, without much improvement) and because he has never kissed a girl? Character identification really fails in this movie, and there's not much of an ironic distance, either.
Neither we learn much about the Jewish community in Montevideo, which is the supposed cultural backdrop. Well, maybe we do learn a couple of things: that they do fairly well, and that your classmates will laugh at you if your father happens to be a bricklayer.
This is not a badly made movie, only a pointless one.
The kiss
Rafael, a precocious Jewish teen ager, in Montevideo, awakens to his sexuality early in the story. Rafa, as he is called has a problem controlling the acne that afflicts most young people. Rafael has been told by a dermatologist to stay away from all those fatty foods and chocolate that seem to be contributing to his problems. He lives with his middle class parents and two siblings in what appears to be a comfortable life.
He frequents prostitutes with his buddies but he is yet to experience kissing a woman. The girls in the brothels he goes to, will do anything with him except giving him what he yearns for and no one seems to give him. At school, Rafael spends most of his time in class daydreaming, drawing, and getting in trouble.
We watch Rafael eying one of the girls in his class, but he is too shy to do, or say, anything to her. One day, waiting outside his father's warehouse, he spots a girl at a small stand kissing a boy passionately. Rafa succeeds getting friendly with the girl after she confesses she is no longer seeing the boy she was involved with. Finally Rafael gets the opportunity he has long lusted for.
A coming of age film from director Federico Veiroj, who wrote his own material. The premise posed in the picture gets a flat treatment by the same man whose idea gave birth to the project. Rafael leads a dull existence. Nothing really exciting happens to make the story more interesting. Rafael's life is highly predictable for a young man with a high libido.