Bennie
(Alden Ehrenreich) goes to Buenos Aires looking for his enigmatic half-brother
Angelo (Vincent Gallo) who now insists on being called “Tetro”. He initially gives his estranged brother a
chilly reception, but his feisty girlfriend Miranda (Maribel Verdu) convinces
him to let Bennie stay. Bennie pesters Tetro
for information regarding their family’s past and is almost always shot
down. While fumbling around the apartment,
Bennie finds one of Tetro’s unfinished plays. He completes it and enters it into a local
festival. This infuriates Tetro and forces
him to reveal a long-suppressed secret.
Tetro
is a throwback to the smaller films writer/director Francis Ford Coppola used
to make in the ‘60s before The Godfather changed the trajectory of his
career. It’s obviously a deeply personal
movie to Coppola. He publicly stated at
the premiere, “Nothing in it happened, but it’s all true”. It’s not particularly bad or anything. It’s just that it will probably mean more to
him than the audience.
I
love both leads. Gallo always brings a
fiery intensity to his roles. This is no
exception. Ehrenreich (in his film debut)
is a genuinely charismatic actor.
Separately, they are engaging in the movie. However, there is just no chemistry between
them. Their styles are like oil and
water, and they never quite mesh. This
kind of suits their estranged characters, but it also prevents the viewer from
fully engaging in their plight.
Coppola
repeats himself a little bit here stylistically speaking. The use of black and white with only sparing
(but meaningful) use of color is very similar to Rumble Fish. I like the idea in theory, but it doesn’t
exactly work this time around. The dancing
interludes (inspired by The Red Shoes) are gratuitous and needlessly
showy. They could’ve easily been edited
out and resulted in a much tighter and more effective movie.
That
said, patient viewers will be rewarded with a memorable and powerful final act.
The sudden shift into full blown
operatic melodrama isn’t entirely successful, but Coppola sticks the landing admirably
enough. Tetro is clearly personal to
Coppola. Creatively, I’m sure he enjoyed
the more experimental tangents the script presents. That doesn’t mean it works as a whole; but I’m
still glad he made it.