With a set-up which could very well come from a
hard-hitting, serious drama, the short film El
Gigante attacks the senses from the get-go.
A young Mexican uses the last of his money to pay a smuggler
to get his wife and kids into America, leaving him to find his own way in.
Which he just about manages; through a fence and into the vast desert expanse
of the Southern States. A man he thinks will be his saviour will in fact plunge
him deep into a terrifying and painful ordeal.
He awakes in a filthy wrestling ring; a sackcloth mask
stitched onto his head, in front of him the thing of nightmares. A behemoth
named El Gigante.
Co-directed by Gigi Saul Guerreo and cinematographer Luke
Bramley, and based on the first chapter of a book by Shane McKenzie, the short
is an outlandish and haunting trip into the sick and depraved underbelly of
civilisation. The characters who populate the bizarre and disturbing world the
poor immigrant finds himself are the type who would keep David Lynch up at
night.
Shot with an eye for the grotesque, and a sound design just
as distressing as the visuals, El Gigante
provides an intriguing entre to the world McKenzie has created in his acclaimed
book Muerte Con Carne, and that might
well be the only downside to the short. It leaves you wanting more. Sure, the
scenes that play over the end credits are a satisfying coda, but this is merely
the first chapter of the book, and one can only hope Luchagore Productions
manage to raise the finances to expand El
Gigante to feature length. The original Kickstarter
pitch promised that this would be opening scene of the full movie, and what an
opener!
Within the short 14 minutes, the film pummels the senses
with a visceral attack as ferocious as the assault delivered by the wrestling
titan depicted. Not only with the actual ‘wrestling’ – which leaves the viewer
feeling as though they’ve been sucker-punched themselves – but in the things
that go on surrounding the ring. A ‘dog’ character – presumably a captive
stitched into a dog costume – is terrifying, running around and getting in the
face of the poor unfortunate immigrant and generally being scary. There’s also
a grubby, cackling family sat around watching the action, eagerly awaiting the
result.
For a short with such a low budget, everything screams
class. The set design is as outlandishly disturbing as it comes, one can almost
smell it. The practical make-up
effects are not overdone, giving them an even more real feel, and that sound! Watching the film on a PC
screener with headphones was a gut-wrenching experience, I can only imagine how
much more powerful it would be on a proper cinema system. The film is currently
doing the festival circuit, and hopefully everyone will get the chance to see
it, and the right people put their hands in their pockets to make the
feature-length version a reality. It needs
to happen!
Check out the trailer below:
9 out of 10
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