This one was put behind a wall and then re-instated by Google.
Excessive.
Squad 2: The Enemy Within
So I skimmed through the SBS program for the week and they had something Brazilian called Elite Squad
as the late, late film. Well, being a curious insomniac movie
completist I am the target audience for such presentations. I tuned in
and it wasn’t long before my jaw was hanging open.
In contrasty colour José Padilha (previously director of the festival hit documentary Bus 174)
offers grim faced star Wagner Moura narrating as commander of the elite
Batalhão de Operações Policiais Especiais (BOPE, the Special Police
Operations Battalion of the Rio de Janeiro Military Police). He wants to
spend time with his wife and new baby and is searching for his
replacement as the Pope’s nearing visit dictates a clean up of the hill
top favellas made no go areas by murderous drug gangs.
Moura - Tropa de Elite |
We’ve seen this juxtaposition of the prosperous ground level privileged
and the desperate slums in South American film before, as early as
Bruno Barreto’s 1978 Amor Bandido or in City of God.
Here the film flash backs contrast police recruits hard head Caio
Junqueira and glasses wearing law student André Ramiro. The fact that
Ramiro is black is never an issue. They find law enforcement seething
with corruption bankrolled by kick backs from the drug dealers.
Ramiro’s law degree studies compromise him when his fellow students are
smoking the dealers’ pot and the privileged class white girl from the
charity NGO he makes it with turns out to be a dope runner’s mistress.
The breaking point comes for Junqueira when a distraught mother can’t
bury her dead drug look-out son because the body can’t be located, while
the cops shift cadavers out of their jurisdictions to stop the murders
appearing on their unit statistics.
The two room mate cops have been put to work in the police garage, which is near inoperable because corrupt officers sell the motors out of new cars and replace them with old clapped-out ones. Junqueira hits on the plan to buy the spare parts they need by putting the commander’s car out of action, so that his usual pay off collection is delayed and the duo send in their own vehicle to get the cash. What’s the commander going to do - call the police?
This
ends up with the pair transferred to canteen duties and their master
mechanic peeling potatoes. Part time brothel owner police lieutenant
Wilhelm Cortaz is sure the cops, who want him to go with them on the
next pay off pick up, plan on doing him in over taking the bribe money,
so the pair set off to cover him with sniper fire from the opposite
hill, only to find themselves out gunned.
At this point - flash back to the opening - the Elite Squad arrive and
save them with their own merciless attack. The boys are hooked and sign
up for the BOPE selection process which makes marine training in Officer and A Gentleman or Vietnam boot camp in Tigerland seem
genteel. The brutal recruitment procedure usually eliminates all but
eight of the hundred applicants. This time it goes down to three. The
instructors deliberately target corrupt trainees, crushing Cortaz. Their
preparation includes abseiling the cliff face and live fire exercises
in the real favella alley ways, where Junqueira proves too gung ho.
They move on the slums and the retaliation takes out Junqueira when he
delivers the glasses Ramiro had promised a local kid. Finding the BOPE
skull tattoo on Junqueira’s body, the gang bangers realize they are
doomed - securing the danger area for the Pope now forgotten.
The dope gangs are equally appalled to find the NGO had a cop among
them. They shoot and burning tire necklace a NGO couple, causing a
protest march. The girl friend tries to help, getting their promise that
they won’t injure the fugitive killer’s girl - cut and the squad have a
blood filled plastic bag over the girl's face to get his whereabouts. The unit
raids the favella and takes down the dealer, who lies on the ground
pleading not to be shot in the face so that his body can be shown in an
open casket.
Twisted time structure, high contrast greenish colour, maximum violence and cynicism. This is rivetting.
I’m still digesting it when next week SBS slap on the sequel in the same
small hours time slot. We pick up seven (?) years later with hero Moura
again narrating as the BOPE methods (“a police force with a skull for
it’s symbol”) are the subject of a condemnatory lecture theater session
by liberal reformer Irandhir Santos.
The situation is even worse now that armed raids have all but cleared
the slum areas of the drug gangs, leaving the corrupt police militia to
take over the rackets. There’s now an alliance of the populist media,
the governor going for re-election and the bent coppers. Maura’s ex-wife
Maria Ribeiro has married Santos and they are raising Moura’s son.
Shift
to Bangui prison, controlled by the murderous street gangs who continue
their feuds inside. One lot revolts, finds an opposing leader and sets
on fire the cell full of bedding where they have him. The prisoners
demand Santos as negotiator and he goes in without a Kevlar vest and
manages to stabilize the situation but the Skulls have been called
(“BOPA doesn’t give a shit”) with Ramiro in charge and the CCTV shows
them waiting guns leveled behind the door the prisoners tried to smash
to get more weapons - very Fritz Lang. When the door is opened there is
a massacre leaving the armed prisoners dead and Santos with blood
spatter all over his "Human Rights" shirt.
Outraged Santos is on about social cleansing but the public love the TV
coverage of the jail shoot-out, stoked by the fat rabble rousing news
commentator who does dance steps on his show, so the governor promotes
Moura (“I fell upwards”) to sub-commander of intelligence, where he is
given control of ‘phone intercepts.
Meanwhile he is growing away from his son, who accepts the outlook of
Santos, Moura’s biggest critic. However Moura is called in to retrieve
the boy and his girl friend from jail for a marijuana offense for which
the kid takes the blame to spare the girl. Father and son get to bond in
a judo work out.
The police station in the uncontrolled area of Tanque is held up and their weapons taken. The Tanque station commander has spotted the fact that the raiders’ knowledge of procedure - and their boots - indicated rogue police rather than drug gangs. In retaliation Ramiro and his men secretly replace the bought police at a station in an area where the heavies expect no resistance and gun them down. The captured gang leader reveals the truth to Ramiro, who vows vengeance, so he is shot in the back by the crooked cop, in front of Commander Cortaz, who considered him the friend who had saved his life - surprise twist disposes of the central character of the first film. Think of him as a Brazilian Han Solo.
The police station in the uncontrolled area of Tanque is held up and their weapons taken. The Tanque station commander has spotted the fact that the raiders’ knowledge of procedure - and their boots - indicated rogue police rather than drug gangs. In retaliation Ramiro and his men secretly replace the bought police at a station in an area where the heavies expect no resistance and gun them down. The captured gang leader reveals the truth to Ramiro, who vows vengeance, so he is shot in the back by the crooked cop, in front of Commander Cortaz, who considered him the friend who had saved his life - surprise twist disposes of the central character of the first film. Think of him as a Brazilian Han Solo.
The poor’s most valuable asset is not the protection money they pay out
for police monopoly cable TV and bottle water but their vote in the
coming election. The girl journalist on the case tracks down the house
where they heavies have stored the stolen weapons and election material
together. She is ‘phoning Santos when the bad hats come back and rape
and murder her - grim scene of an impatient heavy pulling the teeth out
of her charred skull.
Moura gets the copy of her last ‘phone call off the illegal intercept he has placed on Santos’ phone and takes the recording away before his superiors come for it.
Moura gets the copy of her last ‘phone call off the illegal intercept he has placed on Santos’ phone and takes the recording away before his superiors come for it.
He realizes that they will try to off Santos, who is with Moura’s ex
wife and his son, and he waits for them taking out the hit man’s car
with his pistol, though the boy is shot in the exchange of fire. The
scene of reduced-to-a-Suit Moura picking up the machine gun brought by
the skulls and blasting rounds into the nasties is cheer worthy.
The resulting publicity returns Santos to parliament and he gives the rostrum in the House of
Representatives to Moura, who declares two third of the members he is speaking to be corrupt.
Representatives to Moura, who declares two third of the members he is speaking to be corrupt.
Same gritty hi-con look with even better production values. Imposing
visuals - the chopper over-flying the kids playground or the final
aerials of Brazilia as still corrupt survivor whore monger Cortaz flies
in.
I’ve gone into surprise killing detail on these because they are
unlikely to get any real distribution. I can’t find them on SBS on
Demand but, for the determined, they are on You Tube in good English
sub-titled copies.
We can see that José Padilha’s admiration goes out to the skulls,
glimpsed drilling impeccably in their black uniforms and advancing under
fire, leaving the regular police to cower behind them. Pot smoking do
gooders are going to be burned alive by the impoverished mob they
believe they are helping. Ramirez notes contemptuously when the
population turns out in the street over their deaths. “There are no
demonstrations when policemen are killed.” The free press is a clown TV
newsman and and an editor who refuses to follow up when one of his own
is killed. Padilha’s solution is a not all that plausible parliamentary
alliance between the shoot ‘em up lot and the reformers.
I was feeling superior about discovering these outstanding, gritty,
obscure action pieces. Not indicated as a repeat, this must be presumed
to be the local premier. Then I found they were the most successful
Brazilian films of all time, the monster hit in the Spanish language
market and Berlin Grand Prix winner. Here they just sink into the void
as most of the outside the festival net material does. It’s disturbing
but not surprising that the pair reached us without promotion, turning
up as small hours movies on SBS the week that Australia's multi cultural
broadcaster was busy trailering it’s series on Walt Disney. The Sydney
Morning Herald TV Guide for the day featured Will Ferrel in Elf. This was the week Star Wars 7 opened in the multiplexes and The Bélier Family
was in the art cinemas. What kind of film is going to be made in an
environment where this is the frame of reference? Answer - the kind that
gets made in Australia.
In the real world the Elite Squad films were reviewed widely, usually by people who called them fascist & cited The Godfather.
The movie characters themselves dismiss the comparison with Mafia, the
hoods saying the Italians eat lasagna while their lot chow down on rice
and beans. This one is very ethno specific, complete with samba street
carnivals.
Place the films instead in a sequence where the answer to disorder is
to send in the troops. Think President Walter Huston having the army
stand gangsters against the wall in the shadow of the Statue of Liberty
and shoot them in the 1933 MGM Gabriel Over the White House. Phil Karlson’s 1955 Phenix City Story ends in martial law but it introduces the caution against vigilante-ism. Elio Petri’s 1970 Indagine su un cittadino al di sopra di ogni sospetto / Investigation of Citizen Above Suspicion is a caution against the excesses of state control and the military, as is Daniele Vicari’s splendid 2012 Diaz - Don’t Clean Up This Blood (title in English).
I have no way of knowing how accurate the two Padhilha films are.
Brazilians I asked endorse them but, whether it is sensationalized
fiction or documentary actuality, the sure crafted, savage indignation
of the production gives them plausibility. Tropa de Elite 1 & 2 make the movie product we are offered here insipid by comparison.
Barrie Pattison 2023.
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