| Gitano (2000), or 
                Gypsy is a film with several very strong points, hopelessly 
                marred by a weak plot. 
                Joaquín Cortés, a 
                Gypsy, returns to Granada after two years in prison. We learn 
                very little about why he was there, other than the fact that he 
                was in a band with his wife and two friends, and on the verge of 
                making it big, when one of the friends was killed, his wife ran 
                off with a record producer, and he was left to take the rap. His 
                first order of business is to avenge the death, then he tries to 
                find out exactly what happened, and attempts to get his wife 
                back. The police, who don't like gypsies anyway, harass him at 
                every turn. There is no dark mystery that he sleuths cleverly to 
                unravel, just a matter of his bothering those whom he thinks are 
                guilty until the truth comes out.
 On the plus side, the film is dripping with atmosphere largely 
                due to the DP, Hans Burman, and a wonderful flamenco score. We 
                also have three very hot sex scenes with extended nudity in two 
                of them.  I suggest ordering the sound track and skipping 
                the film. C-
 
                Scoops note:
                 
                That's good advice 
                from Tuna, especially if you like the sensuous Spanish-Gypsy 
                music. The movie is nothing special, and the transfer is not 
                impressive at all. 
                I was disappointed 
                that Laetitia Casta's face doesn't photograph as well in movies 
                as in her modeling gigs. She has kind of a crooked mouth, with a 
                pronounced overbite. Her body, however, is spectacular by any 
                definition, and I thought that the sexiest scene had nothing to 
                do with sex. It was the one in which she runs away from Cortés. 
                Laetitia Casta running in a low-cut gown is truly a sight to 
                behold. |