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Innocent Voices Details

2004 Certificate 12
  • Rated:
  • 80
  • from 1112 members

A young boy, in an effort to have a normal childhood in 1980's El Salvador, is caught up in a dramatic fight for his life as he desperately tries to avoid the war which is raging all around him Read more

Starring Carlos Padilla, Leonor Varela, Xuna Primus
Director Luis Mandoki
Genres Drama, World Cinema

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Innocent Voices

A young boy, in an effort to have a normal childhood in 1980's El Salvador, is caught up in a dramatic fight for his life as he desperately tries to avoid the war which is raging all around him

Starring Carlos Padilla, Leonor Varela, Xuna Primus
Director Luis Mandoki
Studio UNIVERSAL PICTURES UK VIDEO RENTAL
Run time DVD: 1 hr 51 mins
Certificate Certificate 12
Genres Drama, World Cinema
Language DVD: Spanish
Subtitles DVD: English
Released DVD: 06 Jun 2006
Production year: 2004
Format DVD
  • Critics' reviews of Innocent Voices

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  • The 80s civil war in El Salvador as seen through the eyes of an 11-year-old whose uncle a guerilla soldier ... read more on Time Out

    • Time Out
  • Most helpful member's review of Innocent Voices

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  • 36 out of 36 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars

    Innocent Voices

    Based on the memoirs of Oscar Orlando Torres, Innocent Voices hearkens back to the 1980s and the brutal civil war that devastated El Salvador.

    Carlos Padilla (through the careful directing of Luis Mandoki) is without a doubt the heart and soul of Innocent Voices. While most directors would avoid placing so young an actor into difficult situations, in particular the climactic scene where Chava faces execution and watches his two best friends get shot in the back of the head, Mandoki defies conventional wisdom and challenges Padilla, who meets and exceeds all expectations. So often, child protagonists are sappy, dry, or just downright annoying. Carlos Padilla however, brings a gravity, and maturity, to his portrayal of Chava that forms the heart of this movie. As the war, inevitably, enshrouds Chava in violence, we get a masterful portrayal of a society destroyed by grief, and a family determined to salvage its spirit from the wreckage.

    Luis Mandoki has produced a film from the heart, with a passionate and well justified disregard for any commercial prospects. He carefully reproduces the realities of this kind of war; the chaos and terror of the nights, the insecurity of living in a world where anarchy rules and the pain of watching friends and family savagely and unexpectedly torn away. Perhaps Mandoki’s most effective tool is his ability to lull us into thinking that Chava stands some chance of a normal existence; we often see him playing with friends like any other 11 year old would. However, every time this happiness is established, guns start firing and Chava finds himself back under the bed with his family as they try to shield themselves from the stray bullets that batter their tiny makeshift house.

    One argument being set against Innocent Voices is that it carries a 'leftist bias” in that there is a tendency to demonize the army. While this is accurate, it's important to realise that the story represents Chava's point-of-view, and the boy's sympathies lie with the guerrillas. Not only because his uncle is in their ranks but because he personally is a victim of government policy and the actions of the army. Innocent Voices is not an essay on the civil war; it’s a first hand recollection of a young boy’s experience of the war. Individual memoirs rarely give a 'balanced' view, that is not their goal, and it's no different here.

    But despite allegations of “leftism” and claims made by high ranking American soldiers that Innocent Voices is not an accurate depiction of the civil war, the final and undisputable result is an emotional and heart warming story of human survival in the most brutal of circumstances.

      • Alexander Davis from Bournemouth, England
  • Most recent members' review of Innocent Voices

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  • 2 out of 3 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    good

    you will like this film a good story with a sad ending

      • A customer from rotherham
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Rating breakdown

1,112 Member ratings
  • 100
193
  • 90
128
  • 80
372
  • 70
188
  • 60
132
  • 50
35
  • 40
33
  • 30
10
  • 20
9
  • 10
12

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    • A young boy, in an effort to have a normal childhood in 1980's El Salvador, is caught up in a dramatic fight for his life as he desperately tries to avoid the war which is raging all around ...