Taglines: The drama of being a kid and being in a gang in Guatemala.
Cadejo Blanco movie storyline. Sarita goes out dancing one night at the insistence of her free-spirited sister, Bea. Uncharacteristically, Sarita dances the night away, heading home alone when the party drags on too late. The next morning, after calling friends and neighbors, Sarita begins to panic when she realizes that Bea never made it home.
The police are indifferent and unhelpful, but Sarita suspects that Bea’s disappearance has something to do with Andrés, her sister’s dangerous ex. Realizing she must take matters into her own hands, Sarita finds a way to befriend him and infiltrate his gang. With an unwavering determination, Sarita becomes increasingly involved with Andrés and the ruthless, violent underworld of Guatemalan street gangs.
Praised for its “gritty authenticity” (Screen Daily) and cast with almost entirely non-professional actors, Cadejo Blanco is an intense, nail-biting thriller in the vein of Sin Nombre and Maria Full of Grace, that digs deep into the underbelly of gang culture.
Film Review for Cadejo Blanco
A young woman in search of her missing sister infiltrates a criminal gang in a Guatemalan coastal town, in the hope of finding answers, but gets sucked ever deeper into its activities. And leaving the gang, she learns, is not an option.
Now and then a US director immerses himself in Latin American culture so effectively that he delivers with all the gritty authenticity of a local filmmaker. Cary Joji Fukunaga did it with Sin Nombre, Joshua Marston with Maria Full of Grace. Now Justin Lerner has built on years of collaborative work with members of Guatemala’s ‘clicas’, or youth gangs, to deliver a nail-biting, evocative and utterly persuasive crime drama that is very much a part of the country’s burgeoning film output.
Cadejo Blanco featured in Tallinn’s current waves strand, after appearances in Toronto and Guadalajara. With its combination of verité and action, and a formidable female lead, it has more than enough quality to follow Fukunaga and Marston’s films into arthouse cinemas.
Sarita (Karen Martinez) lives with her grandmother and sister Bea in a poor district of Guatemala City. She is the more grounded of the siblings, while her sister has a naive habit of dating criminals; so when Bea suddenly disappears, Sarita fears the worst. Knowing the identity of the latest boyfriend, Andres (Rudy Rodriguez), she heads for his hometown of Puerto Barrios. Rather than risk asking a dangerous criminal what he has done with her sister, she makes a hardcore pitch to join the gang.
Andres is one of its lieutenants, alongside Damian (Brandon Lopez), both barely out of their teens and leading a group that is even younger. Lerner economically paints a vivid picture of their operation: women working in the cocaine lab, tiny boys collecting payments, a network of snitches and spies, others killing as casually as delivering the milk – all serving the only adult, a tiny but chilling middle-aged man who is obsessed with killing off his opposition. “Make sure that motherfucker dies,” he barks, while in a rush to get his kids to a birthday party.
This unnamed chief wants to turn Sarita into one of his prostitutes. Andres wins her a reprieve, of sorts, as sexual bait for a rival crime boss, luring him to a place where assassins lie in wait. Sarita’s baptism of fire is one of two impressive set pieces in the film, the other also an intended execution, which Lerner orchestrates with panache.
Meanwhile, Sarita finds that the world she has entered is not as black and white as it seems, with Andres revealing a softer side and strong desire to escape a life that was hardly chosen, but unavoidable. Even the bullish Damian solemnly reflects on the fact that adults in the town “would all be happy if we’re dead.”
Cadejo Blanco is Boston-born Lerner’s third film, after the US-based Girlfriend and The Automatic Hate. Here he works with Argentine DoP Roman Kasseroller and an otherwise wholly Guatemalan crew, including award-winning director Cesar Diaz as co-editor. The result is vibrantly lensed on widescreen, composed and cut to eke the maximum character and drama from its locations, whether bustling nightclubs, lonely streets, or on the highway.
Of the youngsters, only Martinez and Lopez (who shared a special jury prize in Un Certain Regard for 2013’s The Golden Cage) are professional actors; many are current or former gang members, which would certainly explain the film’s easy naturalism. Rodriquez, who lends Andres an awkward, tightly coiled vulnerability, was working in a garage when he answered the casting call.
But for the most part, the attention is on the remarkable Martinez, whose Sarita is stern-faced, hard to read, with a fortitude and a survivor’s knack for improvisation – perfect undercover material, in fact. At the same time, there are glimpses of the emotion she is keeping in check.
Cadejo Blanco (2023)
Directed by: Justin Lerner
Starring: Karen Martinez, Rudy Rodríguez, Pamela Martínez, Brandon López, Juan Pablo Olyslager, René Patzán
Screenplay by: Justin Lerner
Production Design by: Fernando Galvez
Cinematography by: Roman Kasseroller
Film Editing by: Cesar Diaz, Justin Lerner
Costume Design by: Isaac Castellanos
Music by: Jonatan Szer
MPAA Rating: None.
Distributed by: Film Movement
Release Date: April 21, 2023
Cadejo Blanco, Cadejo Blanco 2023, Karen Martinez, Rudy Rodríguez, Pamela Martínez, Brandon López, Juan Pablo Olyslager, René Patzán
Views: 26