Casa De Los Babys (2003)

drama

directed by : John Sayles
featuring : Maggie Gyllenhaal - Marcia Gay Harden - Daryl Hannah - Susan Lynch
running time : 1 hour 35 minutes
John Sayles' Casa De Los Babys tells the tale of a half-dozen American women who travel to Latin America in order to pick up their adopted children. They all stay at the same motel while they each wade through the bureaucracy. Sharing with each other their fears, hopes, dreams, and frustrations at the thoughts of becoming mothers comprises the majority of the drama in the film. The cast also includes Mary Steenburgen, Lili Taylor, and Rita Moreno..

Casa De Los Babys offers most of the customary pleasures of a Sayles film: strong ensemble acting, an intelligent script, and a subject (mothers awaiting clearances for adopted children in an unnamed Latin American country) that's both unusual and lends itself to the depiction of various social classes. Why, then, is it one of the director's less satisfying efforts? Perhaps because the movie spreads itself too thin among its numerous characters and their multiple dilemmas, leaving the viewer hungry for more insight and drama than it ultimately delivers. Certainly, it's strongest when focusing upon the American mothers-to-be, not only in reflecting the fears, insecurities, and disappointments that have led them into the baby market, but also in the entertainingly catty gossip that results from having to sit around a hotel for too long with too little to do while they wait for the red tape to get cut. The numerous native characters, however, have more serious problems and, more importantly, more potentially interesting ones: the articulate English-speaking tour guide who can't find even menial work; the aging revolutionary idealist, stuck working for his mother at the motel; the teenager faced with an unwanted pregnancy; the harried adoption lawyer, principled but only to a point; and the illiterate street urchins. All of their vignettes pass by so fleetingly, though, that we're given little opportunity to be affected by their stories or the larger social injustices of which they're symptomatic. The ending, too, is an anti-climax that leaves you staring at the screen in vain expectation of several missing scenes, though some fine acting -- particularly by Moreno and the American mothers (Taylor and Gay Harden)-- supplies some compensation.