
  Review by
        Eric Hillis
  Directed by: Benjamin Millepied
  Starring: Melissa Barrera, Paul Mescal, Rossy de Palma, Elsa
    Pataky, Tracy Curry
    
      Paul Mescal and Melissa Barrera prove themselves
        all-singing, all-dancing talents in choreographer turned director
        Benjamin Millepied's loose adaptation of Bizet's classic opera
        Carmen. Bizet's work was itself a very loose adaptation of a novella by
        Prosper Mérimée. Overt the decades several filmmakers, including Otto
        Preminger, Jean-Luc Godard and Cecil B. DeMille, have offered their own
        distinctive takes on the opera, diverging from the source material to
        considerable degrees but retaining the central figure of a free-spirited
        but tragic heroine.

      That's what we get with Millepied's film, which he co-wrote with
        Loïc Barrère. What's different about this take is that the roles
        of the titular gypsy and her soldier lover have been largely reversed.
        Possibly with a female and gay audience in mind, the latter is now
        posited as the tragic, brooding figure, with Mescal continuing the
        taciturn, smoldering schtick that has become his trademark in his brief
        career.
    
      Mescal plays Aidan, a young veteran of the conflict in Afghanistan who
        is struggling to adapt to civilian life back in the American SouthWest.
        He just wants to spend his days strumming his guitar and crooning folk
        tunes but his sister convinces him to join a ragtag border patrol
        comprised of official agents and gun-toting vigilantes. When one of the
        latter kills a group of Mexicans he and Aidan discover hiding in a
        truck, Aidan shoots him dead before he can put a bullet in Carmen
        (Barrera), who hopped across the border when her mother was similarly
        gunned down.

      For unclear reasons, Aidan and Carmen decide to stick together and head
        for Los Angeles, where the sanctuary of a friend of Carmen's mother
        awaits. Why an illegal immigrant would want to hang out with a fugitive
        and thus draw extra attention to herself is never quite addressed, but I
        guess she just has a crush on the handsome, brooding soldier.
    
      Carmen never quite figures out what story it's telling,
        or whom it's focused upon. For a brief period it's a road movie, a sort
        of Wild at Heart light, as Aidan and Carmen make their way
        through the sweaty SouthWest, having slightly surreal encounters with
        carnival troupes and a disappearing cabbie who might be an angel. The
        Los Angeles they find is straight out of David Lynch's version of the
        City of Angels, complete with its own version of
        Mulholland Dr.'s Club Silencio, run by a crooning Spanish matriarch (Almodovar
        regular Rossy de Palma). But the darkness and sinister threat of
        Lynch's films is largely absent, and we never really feel like our young
        heroes are in much danger here.

      The superficial storytelling means Mescal and Barrera never quite click as a screen couple, except when
        they're sharing a dancefloor, at which points the film erupts into
        life. Millepied's previous life as a choreographer doesn't entirely gel
        with his new role as a movie director, with some of the dance numbers
        edited in a sloppy manner that betrays a lack of experience in directing
        dance for the screen. But crucially, Mescal and Barrera can convincingly
        throw down a few moves, unlike say Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone in
        La La Land. All of Carmen's best moments involve at least one of its central pair
        strutting their stuff, though its worst moment is a boxing match set to
        a cringey piece of Hamilton-esque hip-hop. By that late point the movie
        has well and truly lost sight of what it wants to be, but it leaves us
        in no doubt that we've spent two hours in the presence of two young
        stars on the rise.
    
    
      
