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Movies

Issue — May 7, 2008

Film Highlight: Chop Shop

By Nathan Lee

Image by Jon Higgins

CHOP SHOP
Parkway Theater, starts Friday

You come away from Chop Shop with a mood, the voluptuous sum of the film's fine-tuned parts: the way a rundown patch of Queens is always flooded with mud; hotdogs smoking from a sidewalk BBQ; the muffled, incantatory chant of "Let's go, Mets!" that spills out into the parking lot of Shea Stadium, where a 12-year-old boy, dodging the eye of security, pries off hubcaps with a screwdriver. His name is Alejandro (Alejandro Polanco), and he steals to keep food on the table and his sister (Isamar Gonzales) away from truckers and their $40 tricks. They're street-wise orphans, squeaking by on Ale's meager odd jobs and his dream of independence, as ill-advised as it is poignant, in the form of a rusty, old, broke-down van that he yearns to one day rehabilitate into his very own bright and shiny tacomobile. All this is imagined by Ramin Bahrani, the acclaimed writer-director of Man Push Cart (2005), though Chop Shop derives much of its value from the sense of being found, not made. All due props to Ale and Isa, wonderfully authentic and nicely harmonized, but the most engrossing character here is Willet's Point, an industrial stretch of unpaved urban flotsam.

From the Author Archive
Nathan Lee
Snow Angels — Lagoon Cinema, starts Friday (Mar 19, 2008)
Film Highlight: The Witnesses — (Mar 12, 2008)
You Kill Me — Following "Untraceable"'s lame-brained argument, we're all to blame for this massively dumb movie (Jan 23, 2008)
My Kid Could Paint That — Lagoon Cinema, starts Friday (Oct 17, 2007)
Strangers on a Train — Wes Anderson's Road-Trip Tale of Brotherly Love Stings with the Depth (Yes, Depth) of His Whimsy (Oct 10, 2007)
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