PFS Film Review
Casa de los Babys


 

Casa de los BabysSome women with means in the United States want but cannot biologically have children. Many women in Latin America have children but cannot afford to care for them. The solution would appear to be for the Americans to adopt the babies. In Casa de los Babys, directed by Political Film Society awardwinner John Sayles, the reality of the solution is laid bare. When the film begins, we view the babies at Posada Santa María, known as "La Casa de los Babys." Soon, we view the women who have arrived in town to adopt, the women who have given up their babies for adoption, the men who are unemployed and cannot support wives and children, the children who live on the street because they were not adopted or are unwanted, and the corrupt bureaucracy that stands in the way of efficient, quick adoption so that American women will spend as much money as possible in the hotels while patiently--and impatiently in at least one case--awaiting to have a baby to bring home. Nan (played by Marcia Gay Harden), the impatient one, is understandably fed up after two months; ultimately she tries to bully and bribe a lawyer to finish the paperwork and succeeds despite her obvious appearance to all as an unfit mother. The main problem from the host country's point of view appears to be that none of the adoptive mothers speak Spanish, so the children will lose an important part of their identity; but prospective mothers are not told that secret. (The actual filming is in México, though the location is supposed to be an unidentified South American country.) Since there is a residency requirement for adoption, the women are stuck in a hotel operated by profiteering Señora Muñoz (played by Rita Moreno), who has disdain for the ill-groomed women while her son sees them as imperialistic parasites. Casa de los Babys, thus, is an exposé of a racket and a tragedy, what happens when rich Americans are juxtaposed with poor people in Third World conditions who relate at the material rather than the spiritual level. The Political Film Society, accordingly, has nominated Casa de los Babys as best film exposé of 2003. MH

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