Pepe | |
Director: | Nelson Carlo De Los Santos Arias |
Music: | Nelson Carlos De Los Santos Arias |
Distributor: | Monte & Culebra |
Runtime: | 122 minutes |
Pepe is a 2024 drama film written and directed by Nelson Carlo De Los Santos Arias. The film starring Jhon Narváez and Sor María Ríos, is voice of Pepe, the first and last hippo killed in the Americas, who appears as ghost and recounts his story with the powerful oral tradition of these communities.[1] [2]
The film is an international co-production between Dominican Republic, Namibia, Germany, and France, and had its world premiere at the 74th Berlin International Film Festival on 20 February, where it competed for the Golden Bear.[3]
A young hippopotamus known by the name Pepe, which the media gave it, was killed in the jungle of Colombia but returns in the form of a ghost. It is a hippo's voice, or so it says. It has no sense of time, only of the past that haunts it. "Is that noise mine? What is this thing I use to make it?" The animal is certain of one thing: it is no longer alive. It was the first and last of its kind to be slain in the Americas. We are drawn into a world of many tales, each containing more tales within. With seriousness and humor, honesty and trickery, images and sounds convey the powerful dialogue of places where creatures like Pepe perished without ever grasping the true nature of their situation.
As Pepe
Others
Pepe, is a hippopotamus who was shifted from his homeland in Africa to Colombia to reside in the private zoo of drug lord Pablo Escobar. The story is 'narrated' by the animal. Carlo Chatrian artistic director of the Berlinale, categoried the film directed by Dominican Nelson Carlos De Los Santos Arias, as "the film featured a blend of genres and styles, making it the most “unclassifiable” film in the selection."
The film is supported by World Cinema Fund, which was launched in 2004 on the initiative of the Federal Cultural Foundation and the Berlinale, and is one of twelve films invited to Berlinale.[4]
The film was shot in locations in Namibia and Colombia.[5]
Pepe had its world premiere on 20 February 2024, as part of the 74th Berlin International Film Festival, in Competition.[6] [7]
The film will be first screened at the 48th Hong Kong International Film Festival on 3 April 2024 in Firebird Awards Young Cinema competition.[8] [9]
The film was featured in Features section of the 71st Sydney Film Festival on June 6, 2024.[10] It was also selected in Wavelengths at 2024 Toronto International Film Festival which will be held from September 5 to 15, 2024.[11]
On the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes website, the film has an approval rating of 70% based on 10 reviews, with an average rating of 9/10.[12]
Jessica Kiang reviewing in Variety said, "Nelson Carlo De Los Santos Arias sends us on an uncategorizably odd journey down the river of his noodling, needling imagination in a rickety canoe that keeps on capsizing, upended by another sideswiping reference, another jarring change of scene and timeframe or yet another stretch of borderline incomprehensible narration from Pepe himself, a creature who is as surprised as we are that he has suddenly acquired language."[13]
David Rooney reviewing the film for The Hollywood Reporter dubbed it as "Structurally messy but oddly haunting," and opined, " the film achieves full force in a breathtaking final image as the camera zooms out high above the sad spectacle of Pepe felled by bullets in lush green grassland, a half-circle of gawping humans standing over the hippo’s bloodied body." Rooney concluded, "The uneven movie is worth seeing for that shot alone."[14]
Marc van de Klashorst reviewed the film for the International Cinephile Society and remarked that the film is "most notable for the incredible nature of its story and for its fine camera and sound work, the hybrid film is enjoyable but overlong, and a prime example of a film that screams for post-viewing research."[15]
Wendy Ide wrote in ScreenDaily while reviewing the film at Berlinale, "Pepe is crammed, perhaps even overstuffed, with ideas, but which, like the huge beasts at the heart of the story, is deceptively agile and light on its feet."[16]
Ola Salwa reviewing the film at Berlinale for Cineuropa wrote, "While the peculiar sound the eponymous hippo makes in Nelson Carlo De Los Santos Arias’s film lingers in the mind after the screening, everything else is washed away quickly."[17]
Nicholas Bell in Ion Cinema rated the film with four stars and said, "Nelson Carlo De Los Santos Arias concocts a continually unpredictable visual and narrative journey which continually shifts and splinters perspectives." Concluding Bell opined, "If there’s any way to rightly convey the essence of what de Los Santo Arias has conjured, Pepe plays like a version of Dumbo as directed by Miguel Gomes."[18]
Writing for RogerEbert.com, Robert Daniels opined, "Pepe’s voice is initially difficult to take seriously: It’s a deep timbre, composed of hooting and grunting. But once the film settles in, guided by Pepe’s poetic recollections of how much he misses an Africa he never knew, the restrictions he must endure while in captivity, the pain of being exiled, and the fear of hearing the whirring of a chopper, the incredulity felt by the viewer is replaced by real sorrow.[19] "
The film was selected in Competition at the 74th Berlin International Film Festival, thusly it was nominated to compete for Golden Bear.
Award | Date | Category | Recipient | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Berlin International Film Festival | 25 February 2024 | Golden Bear | Nelson Carlo De Los Santos Arias | [20] [21] | |
Silver Bear for Best Director | |||||