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Some films leave an indelible impression on the heart and mind. Innocent Voices is one of those films. Set in El Salvador in the early Eighties, during that country's protracted civil unrest, the movie depicts the nightmare of warfare through the eyes of an eleven-year-old boy. The fact it's a...
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Some films leave an indelible impression on the heart and mind. Innocent Voices is one of those films. Set in El Salvador in the early Eighties, during that country's protracted civil unrest, the movie depicts the nightmare of warfare through the eyes of an eleven-year-old boy. The fact it's a true story, based on the life of screenwriter Oscar Orlando Torres, makes it all the more powerful.

Throughout the Seventies and Eighties, El Salvador was awash in violence, as a succession of ineffectual military governments, aided by even more virulently right-wing "death squads" — bankrolled not by the government but by the civilian oligarchy — took on leftist guerrillas who were pushing for agrarian reform. The dispute began as a local affair, but the stakes were raised immeasurably and tragically when both the U.S. government and Fidel Castro became involved. The U.S. sent military advisors and weapons to the government, while Cuba — and the Soviet Union — backed the rebels, also with arms and men. More than 75,000 Salvadorans died or disappeared as a direct result of the fighting.

One of the more horrifying details of the conflict is that the military and, to a lesser extent, the rebels forcibly recruited children into their ranks. Soldiers would swoop into villages and round up boys age twelve and older, marching them off at gunpoint. Those who resisted were shot.

Innocent Voices, in Spanish with English subtitles, concentrates on eleven-year-old Chava (Carlos Padilla Leñero), who lives in a shantytown with his mother Kella (Leonor Varela) and two younger siblings. Although a typical fun-loving kid, he takes his role as man of the house very seriously. As fighting in the area increases and Chava's twelfth birthday approaches, life becomes even more perilous — and Kella becomes more determined than ever to protect her son.

Alternately heart-rending and buoyant, painful and sweetly humorous, the film wonderfully captures how war must feel to children. Terrified when gun battles erupt, they quickly forget their fears when the danger subsides and they return to their normal kid lives.

A great deal of the film's success is attributable to Leñero, an expressive, incredibly likable youngster who seems completely at ease in front of the camera (as do all the children). Despite the fear, sorrow, and tragedy that fills young Chava's life, he never seems to lose his innate exuberance. Shyly courting a classmate; roughhousing with friends; racing down the street, pretending to drive a bus, he has an irrepressible spirit that proves infectious. Varela and Ofelia Medina, as Chava's grandmother, also give fine performances.

The story also touches on the activist role undertaken by the Catholic Church during this period. Daniel Giménez Cacho is stirring as the village priest, who can no longer remain silent in the face of government atrocities. It should be noted that, while Torres and director Luis Mandoki's own political leanings are obvious, they also acknowledge the culpability of the rebels in placing the lives of villagers at risk. And it's clear that Kella and the other mothers don't care which side a bullet comes from if their child is the victim. For the villagers, the war is a case of survival, pure and simple.

Films that portray the effect of war on children's lives are relatively rare. Obvious antecedents include Rene Clement's disquieting Forbidden Games (with one of the most emotionally devastating final shots in film history), Keisuke Kinoshita's extraordinary Twenty-FourEyes, and John Boorman's delightful Hope and Glory, all of which deal with World War II. The first two examples may be about children, but they are definitely geared to adult audiences, while Boorman's comically nostalgic take on London during the Blitz is child-friendly.

Innocent Voices combines the energy and high spirits of this last film with the heart-wrenching tragedy of the first two. Innocent Voices is far more uplifting, undoubtedly in part because we know that Chava/Oscar survived. After all, he grew up to write this movie.

Mandoki, who spent the Nineties directing a string of romantic dramas, including White Palace, When a Man Loves a Woman, and Message in a Bottle, hasn't made a film this good since 1987's Gaby, which depicted the relationship between a middle-age woman with cerebral palsy and her young caretaker. That film, too, was based on a true story and radiated verisimilitude.

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