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The Man with a Thousand Faces Review: Unmasking Deception’s Human Costs

When Lies Weave a Web of Heartbreak

Arash Nahandian by Arash Nahandian
9 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 6 mins read
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Sonia Kronlund’s documentary “The Man with a Thousand Faces” sets out to unravel the deception of a man known only as Ricardo. For years, Ricardo juggled relationships with multiple women across Europe, lying to each about his true identity. Going by names like Alexandre and Daniel, he crafted entirely separate personas, complete with fake careers, families, and pasts.

What drove Ricardo to live such an elaborate fiction? That’s what French filmmaker Kronlund aims to discover as she interviews the betrayed women and pieces together the trails Ricardo left behind. We learn he presented himself as everything from a surgeon to a photographer. Money was sometimes borrowed but not in huge sums, deepening the mystery of his motives.

Four women in particular open up about the time they spent with the man they thought they knew. To Marianne, he was a devoted partner and father to her child. But was any of it real? Through showing empathy for experiences of deception and heartbreak, Kronlund gains her subjects’ trust. She strives to both validate their emotions and solve the enigma of the man behind so many masks.

With help from a private detective, Kronlund tracks Ricardo across borders to finally look him in the eye. Her camera captures the charming exterior that allowed this shapeshifter to flit between lives and loves. But that charming sense is short-lived once we know the fuller truth of his actions. In “The Man with a Thousand Faces,” Kronlund sets out to meet the real person responsible—and perhaps find some answers, or closure, for those still haunted by his lies.

The Masks of Mr. Ricardo

This guy, Ricardo, sure got around. It seems like everywhere Kronlund looked, she found another disappointed lady taken in by his charm. Under a different name in each new place, he somehow juggled relationships with multiple women at the same time without them catching on.

Ricardo, or perhaps we should say Alexandre or Daniel, presented himself impeccably. One woman heard he was a talented surgeon saving lives overseas. Another believed his stories of daring photography assignments abroad. Wherever he laid his head, Ricardo spun a fresh identity complete with career, hometown, and family history.

It’s a wonder he kept any of it straight! Engineering projects in Paris, surgery training in Portugal—the man certainly kept busy. Yet somehow Ricardo found time between assignments to romance sympathetic partners in France, Poland, and beyond. With sweet words and thoughtful gestures, he convinced each one she’d met the man of her dreams.

The depths of Ricardo’s deceptions emerge as Kronlund puzzles together pieces from hurt women. They learn how he portrayed a picture-perfect family that didn’t truly exist. Ricardo also knew just what each girlfriend hoped to find and acted the part flawlessly until his next “work obligation” whisked him away to start anew.

It raises the question: how did Ricardo manage such elaborate fiction, charming so many for so long? The documentary sets out to solve this mystery, uncovering how many masks the elusive Mr. Ricardo managed to wear—and why these ladies’ guards were down just long enough to let him in.

The Heartbreak of Ricardo’s Lies

Talking with the women Ricardo conned isn’t easy viewing. You feel for these folks as they revisit the hurt this guy caused, even if it’s years later. It’s obvious talking about it stirs up all sorts of emotions—anger, shame, sadness—and they’re trying hard to keep it together by explaining their stories.

The Man with a Thousand Faces Review

A few asked to stay anonymous, and you can’t blame them. One woman agreed to an interview but drew the line at showing her face. I can’t say I’d want the whole world knowing the details if it was me! So Kronlund got actors to read what some of the women wanted said.

The feelings they describe range so much it’s hard to imagine how one man juggled it all. Marianne breaks your heart the most—she had Ricardo’s baby before finding out he was leading completely different lives elsewhere too. It can’t be easy raising a child alone after the lies blow up your world like that.

A few try to laugh now at just how ridiculous it seems in hindsight. But you see the anger and hurt behind their eyes. Each thought they understood Ricardo, that he truly cared for them, only to discover they were just another character in the story he was spinning. The sadness of never really knowing who he was at all comes through strong.

Talking opens old wounds for sure. Yet being heard seems to help the healing too. You get the sense this documentary gave a voice to experiences often kept private. In sharing their truths, maybe these women find some of the closure Ricardo never gave.

Getting to Know the Real Ricardo

You can see Kronlund’s not messing around in her hunt to uncover the truth about this Ricardo guy. She pulls out all the stops to learn who he truly was behind the masks. And it wasn’t easy when the guy seemed to change identities quicker than clothes!

Hiring a private eye was a smart move. Having a pro on the case means they knew all the right ways to start digging. Financials, old addresses, records from past aliases—no stone went unturned finding fresh leads on this slippery character.

Together they follow a real paper trail, criss-crossing Europe. It shows how complicated Ricardo’s scheme was, inventing whole life histories in each new city he rolled into. But also proves there’s no con, so elaborate it can’t be cracked given enough time and effort.

Piece by piece, Ricardo’s real story emerges. It turns out our friend had aliases before “Ricardo” was ever in the picture. Each new discovery fills in another part of the puzzle. In the end, Kronlund and the detective manage to trace Ricardo all the way back to who he really was—and where to find him now.

I gotta hand it to Kronlund; she was determined to unmask the man pulling the strings. All that work paid off getting answers for the women done wrong. With the lies stripped away, maybe now they could start finding some peace.

Getting to Know the Real Fake

All that digging around paid off—Kronlund tracks Ricardo down face-to-face. Bet that felt weird seeing the man behind so many tall tales in the flesh.

The Man with a Thousand Faces Review

At first he’s laying it on thick, laying on the charm like we’ve heard. But up close, it’s easy to pick his performance apart. Dude’s sweating bullets and fumbling through his lines. Far cry from the smooth operator these ladies fell for!

It’s wild getting a look at what drew people in. Our guy sure knows how to work a room when need be. Yet once the flattery dies down, all that’s left is an average Joe grasping at excuses.

When pushed, Ricardo’s story starts shifting like sand. Whole childhoods and families get rewritten on the fly. Even throws in a dead parent or two for sympathy! It takes some serious acting chops to keep lies that far-fetched straight.

In the end, what’s left isn’t much—just a small man with big dreams of leading bigger lives. It takes some nerve living as many times as our pal Ricardo. Too bad it only left real hearts in the dirt along the way. Guess even a phony life’s better than facing whatever he’s running from, but these gals deserved the real guy, warts and all.

Getting Inside Ricardo’s Head

You gotta wonder—what was going on in that guy’s head, eh? How’d he keep so many fictional lives straight without something cracking upstairs? Kronlund doesn’t give us all the answers, but digging into Ricardo she finds a few clues.

Power and control were clearly part of it. Living as many people as he wanted gave Ricardo a thrill. And those charms of his—saying just what each woman needed to hear—that take some real skill reading people. Maybe he got off on feeling like a puppet master behind it all.

But there also seems to be some insecurity underneath. Changing identities let Ricardo avoid facing who he truly was. With a new name, he could rewrite his personal history and pretend to accomplishments. Who knew what he’d faced? Each gal essentially served as an audience for Ricardo’s self-made drama.

It was hard to say if he even knew himself, juggling so many roles. The documentary points out the line blurred between fact and fiction in Ricardo’s head. Kind of makes you think about your own perception of reality, no?

In the end, catching a glimpse of this uneasy imposter’s unscripted self is what gives Kronlund her own kind of truth. If even Ricardo didn’t know where his personas ended and the real man began, it shows how we all wear masks—whether for good or ill.

Wrapping Up Ricardo’s Mysteries

What a ride Kronlund takes us all on, eh? From the first heartbreak to that tense showdown, she keeps us glued to the screen the whole way. In the end, there’s still plenty left to wonder about Ricardo and all his games.

But maybe that’s the point. Some folks will always be a mystery, even after their masks come off. At least these ladies got some answers instead of being left in the dark. And Kronlund proves making sense of mad stories like hers is what documentaries do best.

Who knows if we really ever cracked Ricardo or just raised more questions? Either way, the documentary gives voice to their experiences in a respectful, thoughtful way. It stays thoughtful too, considering how we all wear faces for different stages of our own lives.

In the end, The Man with a Thousand Faces sticks with me for keeping its focus on the people, not just the puzzle. It honors real experiences over facile judgments. For that level of empathy and care in storytelling, this one remains a keeper—even if Ricardo’s riddle may never fully unravel.

The Review

The Man with a Thousand Faces

8 Score

Kronlund crafts an absorbing, empathetic profile of deception's human impact through her exploration of Ricardo's schemes. While mystery endures around its subject, the documentary enlightens by prioritizing understanding over easy answers. Maintaining focus on the women's perspectives, it honors their truths over their trickster's intrigue. The Man with a Thousand Faces stays thoughtful in its reflections and honest in its complex portrayals.

PROS

  • Sympathetic and in-depth portrayal of the emotional impacts of deception
  • Thoughtful examination of truth, lies, and living dishonestly through its subject
  • Prioritizes understanding victims' perspectives over facile judgments of its subject
  • Skilled storytelling and direction maintain focus on human experiences.

CONS

  • Some unanswered questions remain around Ricardo's true motives and character.
  • Could have benefited from additional psychological analysis
  • Occasionally lacks narrative momentum during interviews

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: DocumentaryFeaturedSonia KronlundThe Man with a Thousand Faces
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