Glue Sniffer

Glue Sniffer (Spanish: Huelepega: Ley de la calle) is a 1999 Spanish-language film directed by Elia Schneider. It was an international co-production between Spain and Venezuela. It was Venezuela's official Best Foreign Language Film submission at the 72nd Academy Awards, but did not manage to receive a nomination.[1]

Huelepega: Ley de la calle
Directed byElia Schneider
Produced byJosé Ramón Novoa
StarringJose Gregorio Rivas
Alfredo Medina
Luis Campos Pelón
Pedro Lander
Laureano Olivares
Release date
  • January 8, 1999 (1999-01-08)
Running time
110 minutes
CountryVenezuela
Spain
LanguageSpanish

It won at the 2000 International Human Rights Film Festival.[2]

Synopsis

The 11-year-old Oliver is driven out of his mother's house by abuse from her new boyfriend, and then he struggles to live on the streets. He tries to avoid the crime common to young homeless children, but life gets harder when a drug gang tries to recruit him.[3]

Cast

  • Jose Gregorio Rivas - Oliver
  • Alfredo Medina - Mocho
  • Luis Campos Pelón - Chino
  • Pedro Lander - Saúl
  • Laureano Olivares - Pelao

Production

The production examined real child homelessness as well as other social issues to inform the story,[4] as well as using amateur actors and trying to create a documentary feel.[5]

During filming in 1997, the Venezuelan National Institute for Minors (INAM) prevented filming from continuing over concerns for the amateur child actors involved; the production denounced this as an arbitrary block, as they had already been granted permission by courts presided over by a Juveniles Judge. Schneider proposed that INAM wanted to interfere with the narrative instead, as the motion allowed them to review all footage before release and unilaterally cut or edit parts in the name of protecting the image of the children. Nancy Montero from INAM said that they didn't want to prevent filming or anything else bad, they just wanted some time to edit the script before filming continued so that the children would not be psychologically harmed by the roles they were playing. However, filming had never stopped, only moved to secret locations.[2]

Reception

Economía Hoy wrote that the film was following the Latin American style of rejecting entertainment culture in favor of reflecting on society. It compares the film to the Schneider-produced and Novoa-directed 1994 Sicario, which also uses commonplace violence to enhance its narrative.[4] Luisela Alvaray compared the film to Buñuel's Los Olvidados.[6]

Rodolfo Izaguirre complements the film as having "merits that are not always found in other Venezuelan films: a worked script[,] efficient production work[,] art direction and costumes, and a cast in which professional actors such as Pedro Lander, Adolfo Cubas and Lucio Bueno, among others, move comfortably in the middle of real street children".[7]

According to the Centro Nacional Autónomo de Cinematografía, the film saw a Venezuelan audience of 301,555.[2]

gollark: I do not think I agree with their improvement plan. I'll be writing my own manifesto thing.
gollark: Yep!
gollark: I agree.
gollark: We will use approval voting. You can vote for people who are not lyric.
gollark: They *may* be mildly evil and also appear to make claims to objectivity which I don't think are valid.

References

  1. "Record 47 Countries In Oscar Contention" (Press release). Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. 1999-11-22. Retrieved 2008-08-20.
  2. Zerpa, José Alirio/claritza Arlenet Y. Mixzaida Peña (2010-03-03). "Cine 100% Venezolano: Huelepega: ley de de la calle. Historia de una historia". Cine 100% Venezolano. Retrieved 2019-08-31.
  3. "Huelepega: Ley de la calle". Ibermedia Digital (in Portuguese). 2015-05-07. Retrieved 2019-08-31.
  4. "Huelepega: cuando la realidad merece una denuncia en 35 milímetros". Ibermedia Digital (in Portuguese). 2015-07-28. Retrieved 2019-08-31.
  5. "Una historia de sobrevivientes". Ibermedia Digital (in Portuguese). 2015-07-28. Retrieved 2019-08-31.
  6. "Un país para querer". Ibermedia Digital (in Portuguese). 2015-07-28. Retrieved 2019-08-31.
  7. "Espacios abiertos para la violencia". Ibermedia Digital (in Portuguese). 2015-07-28. Retrieved 2019-08-31.
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