Review by Lewis Tice
By: Lewis Tice
In-House Review - Jul 02 2008
Sinfully handsome Victor (Pablo Puyol, 20 Centimeters) is a real estate agent working in Chuecatown, Madrid's quickly gentrifying neighborhood (think Northern Liberties). But he hides a terrible secret: he has been murdering elderly women, disguising...
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Sinfully handsome Victor (Pablo Puyol, 20 Centimeters) is a real estate agent working in Chuecatown, Madrid's quickly gentrifying neighborhood (think Northern Liberties). But he hides a terrible secret: he has been murdering elderly women, disguising them as "suicides" and then quickly flipping their apartments to upwardly-mobile gay couples. When bearish couple Ray (Carlos Fuentes, Kilometer Zero) and Leo (Pepón Nieto, Bulgarian Lovers) inherit the latest victim's apartment, they offer it up to Ray's mother, Antonia (the saucy Concha Velasco, Kilometer Zero), but Victor's master plan is to create the ultimate "gayborhood," and the older woman doesn't fit the demographic. Meanwhile an eccentric detective (Rosa Maria Sardá, All About My Mother) and her sexually-confused son, Luis, begin to undercover the scheme. In this fast-paced comedy, Chuecatown is brimming with zippy one-liners, a smorgasbord of male eye-candy and comic mishaps in the great recent tradition of Spanish cinema. (Spanish with English subtitles)
Review by Amos Lassen
By: Amos Lassen
"Boystown"
Diversity and Acceptance
Amos Lassen
The Spanish comedy "Boystown" ("Chuecatown") shows a great deal of the diversity and acceptance by the people of Spain.
Victor (Pablo Puyol) is a real estate agent in the neighborh...
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"Boystown"
Diversity and Acceptance
Amos Lassen
The Spanish comedy "Boystown" ("Chuecatown") shows a great deal of the diversity and acceptance by the people of Spain.
Victor (Pablo Puyol) is a real estate agent in the neighborhood of Chuecha which is in the process of gentrification. He, however, harbors a secret-his apartments only go on the sales market only after he murders the elderly women that live in them and then disguises the deed as suicide. After the deaths, Victor refurbishes the apartments and sells them to gay couples. We learn that Victor's idea was to transform the area to a "gayborhood".
Victor chooses his next victim as the one who lives next door to a gay couple, Ray (Carlos Fuentes) and Leo (Pepon Nieto) who are due to inherit the apartment and then want to give it to Ray's mother, Antonia. Victor, however, only wants gays of high incomes to move in and he begins to plot a way to get Antonia out of the apartment. Enter the inspector Mila and her witless son, Luis who are assigned to investigate the murders and all comedy breaks loose. There are more murders and lots of sex and much, much comedy.
I recently read a review by a Spaniard who saw the film when it was released in Madrid and he disagreed with almost everything I have written here and, hey, that's what makes the world go around-different strokes for different folks. Of course, living in Spain he had a completely different perspective on what the film shows. I have to agree that many of the jokes are those that only members of the gay community can understand and some of them are quite dated. Some of the other jokes were obviously local to the Spanish population only as they referred to the political system about which, I suspect, many Americans are not familiar.
I enjoyed the movie but it is not great cinema. It is nothing more than fun and that is fine with me.
Review by jaycbird
By: jaycbird
BOYSTOWN (Chuecatown) (dir. Juan Flahn, Spain, 2007, 93 mins.) is one of TLA Releasing's latest and most entertaining DVD acquisitions! The film throws a farcical pie in the face of "gay gentrification" of a neighborhood, in which a gay real estate a...
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BOYSTOWN (Chuecatown) (dir. Juan Flahn, Spain, 2007, 93 mins.) is one of TLA Releasing's latest and most entertaining DVD acquisitions! The film throws a farcical pie in the face of "gay gentrification" of a neighborhood, in which a gay real estate agent (played by Pablo Puyol), who self describes himself as an "Apollo", will murder to create vacancies for his ideal neighborhood. He is pursued by one of the most compelling and fascinating detectives I can remember, played by Rosa Maria Sarda, in a performance that goes beyond derivatives! She is "Jane Tennison" meets "Monk" as her unbridled drive to solve the crime is aided and hampered by her unending list of phobias, as well as her sidekick, who happens to be her son, too. Sarda walks an amazing line between caricature and realism, which allows the rest of the cast freedom to explore the madcap domestic comedy that their subplots involve. The central relationship in the comedy is between a gay couple, who would be most typically described as "bears" and a mother, who is so vilely and profanely played with utter joy by Concha Velasco, that the horrid gay epitaphs that she spews at her "son in law" are so shocking to be forgivable in the context of the farce! She is an incredible ! So much so, that the inevitable confrontation with the killer would seem to be unfair. The pair of boyfriends around which this situation revolves are played with a sincere warmth and honesty that is rarely seen in U.S. cinema. Carlos Fuentes and Pepón Nieto have a real chemistry on screen and display no physical reluctance in displaying their characters' affection for each other.
Director Juan Flahn has staged and paced the film at a breakneck speed! In fact, since it is subtitled, I would suggest that this is NOT a casual viewing! I found that I needed to be exceptionally alert and attentive in order to get into his rhythm in dialogue and editing, without missing the comic inflections and actions of the performers. It almost requires viewer participation in order to move past the subtitling and become part of the comedy. However, by the time the film moves into its outrageous climatic chase, dialogue is nearly unnecessary.
The video transfer is remarkably clear and the sound design is adequate for this "parlor farce". It is in anamorphic widescreen and there are no visible artifacts. The soundtrack only "pops" during the credits, with a remarkably suitable theme.
Unfortunately, for what a blast I had with the film, the disc lacks the extra features one might hope for. In fact, the "Photo Gallery" is almost a TEASE, as there are stills from scenes that were obviously deleted from the final cut. There are "making of" credits in the endroll, and I am tempted to find a Region 2 release of the DVD in case there are Deleted Scenes in its original release in Spain.
Overall, I was pleasantly surprised by BOYSTOWN! The cover art hardly hints at the joys awaiting in the film!