Stepping into the orphanage, Rita is quickly swept into a world of wonder and danger. Though she only just arrived, she senses this place holds mysteries beyond what meets the eye. The girls here face struggles no child ever should, yet have found ways to survive with spirit intact. They divide into clans with fanciful names: Fairies and Princesses, Rabbitkin, and Punk Pack K9s. But Rita is drawn to a rowdier bunch, the Angels, who greet her with open arms despite her initial doubts.
Under Bebe’s guidance and Sulmy’s protection, Rita comes to see these girls not just as bunkmates but as sisters facing the evils of night together. Though the adults bring threats instead of comfort, the magical costumes and tribes let the girls craft resilient worlds of their own. As days pass, Rita grows close to her new family, sharing laughs as well as fears of the guards who leer without caring who they harm.
When rebellion stirs, Rita stands with her sisters against the cruelty no child deserves to know. But will their defiance only lead to more pain, or could it offer a glimmer of freedom if only they held fast to each other? This place may keep them captive, yet through friendship the girls find respite, reminding all who watch that even in darkness, the human spirit stays alight through our shared hopes.
Angels in Revolt
This film explores some heavy themes. At its core, it’s about oppression and those with power taking advantage of the vulnerable. The girls in this home receive no protection—instead, they face unrelenting abuse.
Sadly, this wasn’t just a story; it commented on real tragedies in Guatemala. Bustamante’s previous work explored similar injustices, and Rita continues shining a light on the societal problems women and children face.
To tell such a harrowing tale, the director infuses it with magical realism. And it works so well—the girls find ways to imagine themselves as mystical creatures, building their own world within that grim place. It helps them cope and rebel in their own way.
But beyond providing a creative outlet, their costumes take on deeper symbolism too. The girls show defiance simply by being who they want to be, despite the adults trying to dehumanize them.
And those around them use any means, even technology, to further the abuse. Photos traded online—it’s sickening, but a sobering reminder that these acts aren’t far in the past. They still happen everywhere today.
Through it all, Rita emphasizes the girls’ resilience in the face of such mistreatment and lack of protection. Their fantasy represents refusing to let circumstance defeat them. It’s powerfully inspiring, given all they endured.
The Angels’ Rising
This story belongs to Rita. She arrives at the home hoping to find respite, but quickly learns her new “protection” brings anything but. From the start, her path transforms drastically as she’s inducted among the “Angels.”.
There, she finds unlikely allies in spirits like Bebe, Sulmy, and the stubborn Terca. At first, Rita resists their rituals, but their bond grows undeniable. They protect her through ritual and rebellion alike, yet don’t hesitate to challenge when needed.
Beyond supporting Rita, each girl stands fiercely in her own right. Despite minimal training, the cast brings these “Angels” alive with nuance, grit, and heart to spare. Special praise goes to Giuliana Santa Cruz for her breakout turn as the resilient Rita anchoring it all.
While cloaked in fantasy, the true monsters here lack any magic—they terrorize simply by power of station. The guards see the girls as playthings; the matron offers no comfort. Their cruelty stems solely from choosing inhumanity.
It’s a credit to Bustamante’s direction that even non-professionals bring these abusive figures to sinister life through a palpable menace. Their threats spark the rebellion steadily growing under Rita and her sisters’ guidance.
As the “Angels” bond tightens and their defiance mounts, Rita’s story becomes the rise of them all. Their humanity and spirit could not be broken, only harnessed into a force for change against even the cruelest of circumstances.
Fantastical Visions in a Dire Setting
What an achievement from cinematographer Inti Briones. Those sweeping shots beautifully emphasize the cramped confines these girls know, with walls seeming to close in all the tighter.
Yet at the same time, Briones imbues even the dimmest scenes with lushness through magical color choices. Dark blues and foreboding hues lend an aura of fantasy, even as shadows and tight angles induce a constant sense of dread.
The costumes too exist in this striking balance. While clearly crafted by youthful hands, they vibrantly bring the various “tribes” to life. Angels in feathered robes and rabbit ears are enchanting, even when terror lies just out of frame.
Certain visions especially stand out—ghostly presences swathed in twinkling threads of light. A chilling sight yet somehow hopeful, with their mystery adding mystery to this bleak place.
At times visual tricks miss the mark, like a CGI element pulled taut. But overall the results are astonishing, from exquisitely dressed sets to Reyes’ score stirring imagination and sorrow in sync.
Through deft stylistic mixing, Rita leaves viewers floating amid the story’s shadows and wonders. A reminder that even in direst settings, the spirit finds a way to shine.
A Story’s Lingering Impression
This film walks a delicate line, blending grim reality with flashes of magic. Somehow it works—the fantasy reflects the girls’ defiance against circumstance, while gritty scenes drive home their suffering.
Through it all, an overarching empathy shines through. We feel their horrors yet also celebrate their spirits. Their abuse is depicted, but violence remains implied—honoring victims means not sensationalizing their pain.
As credits roll, an emotional toll lingers. Harsh truths linger in your mind, as does their resilience. It ensures this tragedy stands remembered, the victims forever honored.
By addressing injustice through their eyes, it inspires a desire for change. Their plight depicted, viewers leave questioning how such acts could be allowed and how protections failed so dramatically.
Its digital release grants it a platform perhaps wider than Bustamante’s art house films. But this story deserves the largest audience to further demand accountability. Where oversight slipped, understanding may now take hold.
Ultimately, Rita impacts by reflecting our shared humanity. Through their trials we recognize pieces of ourselves, and their perseverance stirs something admirable in even the coldest of hearts. Such is the mark of a story destined to endure.
Tales to Open Eyes
This film stands alongside works like Pan’s Labyrinth in its fusion of grim truth and faerie tale. Both use magic’s brush to paint injustice in painterly strokes few will forget.
Where others plunge bleakly into children’s plights, Rita couples verisimilitude with wonder. Its young subjects find refuge in make-believe yet can’t flee reality’s reach. This duality immerses viewers fully in its girls’ dual worlds.
Even Bustamante’s searing La Llorona proves less unsettling a watch. Rita anchors fantasy more deeply, in fact, honoring victims by facing hard truths head-on. Yet brilliance shone through in both, as will recognition for the artist’s efforts.
Festival acclaim and accolades surely await. As with La Llorona, acclaim from discerning eyes like Criterion’s should follow in good time. For who could watch and not feel changed? Or walk away, sharing its message far and wide?
Tales like these demand the largest audiences to open minds and spur change. Bustamante has proven himself a master of using any means, be they magical or grim, to share society’s hidden scars and ignite understanding. For that, his place is assured among the greats.
A Cry for Justice Rings On
What a piece of cinema this proved to be. Though harrowing in subject, Rita showed compassion where others might resort to sensationalism. Bustamante balanced hard truths with mystical grace, honoring victims through empathetic storytelling.
Across stunning visuals and emotional performances, technical talent shone in support. But the true triumph belongs to the girls, whose spirits could not be broken though abused so terribly. Their voices are given life to demand answers, to ignite understanding.
As credits rolled, the audience was left moved yet simmering for change. For while Rita depicted tragedy, its greater purpose was rallying a call we cannot ignore. View it, let its message linger in your mind, and spur you to spread word of the injustices still faced today.
To streaming services The film now comes, ensuring the girls’ story reaches far beyond festival walls. But their plight deserves acknowledgment beyond any screen. Let Rita stand as a requiem, a reckoning, and a reckoning—a demand that protections be strengthened and the cruel held to account.
For in stories like this, when empathy meets outrage, change can begin. Bustamante proves himself a visionary by demanding eyes be opened. Now it is for all witnesses to ensure this call for justice rings on.
The Review
Rita
Jayro Bustamante's Rita proves a hauntingly empathetic masterwork, honoring real tragic events through a blend of grim realities and magical spirit. While profoundly disturbing in substance, its greatest successes are illuminating injustice with compassion, demanding change through lived-in profundity rather than spectacle. Bustamante shows here a gift for storytelling that educates as it moves—works like this are needed eyes-openers that should find audiences for years to come.
PROS
- Deeply moving and impactful story based on real tragic events
- Masterful blend of realism and magical elements
- Fantastic performances from the young cast
- Evocative visual style and production values
- Handles difficult subject matter with empathy and sensitivity.
CONS
- Some effects moments feel slightly distracting.
- Very dark and harrowing at times.