on the horizon
by Douglas Messerli
Sebastián Muñoz and Luis Barrales
(screenplay), Sebastián Muñoz (director) El príncipe (The
Prince) / 2019
Winner of the Queer Lion Prize at the Venice
International Film Festival in 2019 the Chilean Sebastián Muñoz-directed
motion picture, El príncipe (The Prince) is one of the best LGBTQ
offerings I have seen in some years.
The
Hollywood Reporter reviewer Boyd van Hoei did not at all agree with such a
sentiment, writing:
“A pretty boy — or, to be more precise, an
angular jawline and a head of lush curls in search of a personality — is thrown
into a dark and dank prison in 1970 Chile in The Prince (El principe).
For most people, this would be a horror scenario, but this feature is such a
work of homoerotic fantasy,
pilfering liberally from sources ranging from Un
Chant d’amour to Querelle and the opera omnia of Jean-Daniel
Cadinot, that the protagonist doesn’t mind being locked away with a bunch of
handsy, well-endowed inmates for even one hot minute. Quite the contrary, as
behind bars he’ll find plenty of man-on-man action, cute bell-bottoms and
perhaps even the homosexual Holy Grail
decades before the age of marriage equality:
love.”
It’s a rather mean review, bitchy and not even very correct in its easy
put-downs. First of all, that young man who is imprisoned, Jaime (Juan Carlos Maldonado), upon his arrival in the menacing prison is
thrown into the cell headed by one of the most powerful men in this hell-hole,
“the Stallion” (Alfredo Castro), a somewhat elderly prisoner who recognizes
immediately that the authorities have spent some time in beating the new
prisoner before his arrival.
Besides these facts, it is also clear that Jaime is guilty of
inexplicably murdering a man, who we later discover was his very best friend,
“the Gypsy” (Cesare Serra). Without fully realizing it, Jaime had fallen in
love with this off and on heterosexual and bisexual beauty, and, more cognizant
of the fact, he had become obsessed regarding his friend’s heterosexual
affairs. In one later flashback, Jaime watches, with rapt voyeurism, his
“friend” fucking a local girl, after which, upon their departure, he wallows in
the animal smell left in the dirt while masturbating to the memory of the
event.
Having experimented with an older woman, and having demonstrated to his
own friends—most of them younger and less sexually experienced that even he
is—Jaime is obviously still confused by the series of emotions and events that
have swept over him resulting in his jealous-driven slitting of “the Gypsy’s”
neck. And in his utter confusion the young boy likely feels that he must suffer
any consequences with which he is faced.
I
suspect van Hoei’s reference to the arty French porn director Cadinot is simply
a result that, unlike most such gay films, Muñoz is thoroughly unafraid of
portraying male nudity and homosexual activities which—at least in the scenes
from the uncut version of his film—showed the figures actually producing sperm.
In short, this director recognizes what gay sex really is and in what that
activity results. I’m rather sorry that he was either censored by others or
himself in his deletion of Maldonado’s penis actually producing what it was
intended to.
Indeed, throughout the early scenes in the
prison, the beautiful Jaime is almost entirely passive the way any young person
might be entering an entirely new world after being utterly shocked by his own
bizarre behavior and unable to know what he might now expect. Only the loving
care of his new mentor gradually releases Jaime’s memories (opening him up into
multi-dimensionality) which he has locked away in his mind.
And
yes, the entire prison, including the two handsome boys who sleep over him on
the top level of the bunk, is a sort of body-heaving testimony to what happens
to highly testosterone- producing men and boys when they are locked away
without women. Films featuring both men and women shut away in clinks have
hinted a same-sex activity since the earliest of LGBTQ films.
Furthermore,
I’d argue this is not truly a film about gay sex, even if Muñoz is not afraid
of portraying it. True, as a kind of reward for the boy’s love and his own
faith in The Prince, the Stallion does eventually offer up his own arse to the
Jaime’s cock. And those boys in the upper bank, a bit like the gay figures in
Derek Jarman’s Sebastiane, do seem eternally interconnected at the
groin. But there are a great many other ways, in this prison, to torture one
another than with open sex.
And
when that doesn’t work, “Che Pibe” takes more direct methods to get the
Stallion’s goat through the hanging death of the elder’s lovely cat, Plato,
taking down with it all higher logic as the cat’s owner faces off with the
prison vendor through a knife fight that eventually ends in both their deaths.
Finally, The Prince presents a world that is not as much a sexual
fantasy of those involved, as in Genet or Fassbinder’s conceptions, but as a
necessary world created, in particular, by Jaime to serve as an alternative
“other” to the fascist world of mayhem and murder which, soon after his
imprisonment was created by the rise to power of Salvador Allende and, after
Allende’s suicide, the takeover by General Augusto Pinochet. Some days in the
reign of Donald Trump, admittedly, I almost wish I myself might be able to
enter into a world of my own making. As flawed as that may be, it might
certainly be superior to the world in which we now are forced to live.
Early in the film, Jaime, as if already knowing that whatever he might
experience in this new environment will mean abandoning everything in his past,
he tells his only visitor (his father, his uncle?) never to return. If he can
already perceive that his new world can result in fear and death, at least
love, sex, and beauty—along with the respect upon which the Stallion insists,
may exist on the horizon.
By
work’s end, the now powerful Prince, it is clear, has learned even from his
mentor’s mistakes. When another young boy is deposited in his cell, he puts the
newcomer on the floor, and for one more night at least, keeps Dany in his bed.
Los Angeles, August 17, 2020
Reprinted from World Cinema Review (August
2020).




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