|   The Whistlers (6/10) by Tony Medley 97 minutes NR when reviewed but I would rate it R. Not to be confused with the 1940s-era radio show, 
		this is a convoluted thriller that keeps you guessing throughout. 
		Written and directed by Corneliu Porumboiu at the expense of being 
		trite, things are not as they appear. Cristi (Vlad Ivanov) is a Romanian 
		policeman who is also working for the mafia. As a result his position is ambiguous and 
		intricate. He is sent to La Gomera Island to learn an ancestral 
		whistling language with the idea that it will allow him easy 
		communication with his evil bosses on the other side of the law. They 
		want to get one of their own, Zsolt (Sabin Tambrea), out of prison. 
		Zsolt apparently knows where several million dollars in cash is hidden 
		and everyone wants it. Delicately balancing between different sides of the 
		law, He teams up with the seductive Gilda (Catrinel Marlon) to get the 
		money for themselves. Because they will have to traverse the spirals of 
		dishonesty, deceit and trickery they somehow figure that the trip to the 
		Canary Islands to learn the secret whistling language is their chance to 
		pull it off. There actually is a whistled language called El Silbo, 
		practiced on the island of La Gomera. But things get more complicated 
		and nothing goes according to plan.  Director Porumboiu's idea was to make this kind of 
		a noir-like movie of strong women manipulating weaker men. Joining Gilda 
		is Cristi’s boss, Magda (Rodica Lazar) who Porumboiu viewed as Marlene 
		Dietrich-lite. Porumboiu says, “The women are pulling the strings to 
		move the story forward. Here, we understand that he is being carried 
		along by the women. In the end, Cristi’s decisions are not his choices!”
		 It’s advertised as “comedy/crime,” but I didn’t see 
		much comedy. If it's noir, it's upper minor league noir, maybe Triple A. 
		The whistling gimmick isn't very believable and diminishes what could 
		have been a good story. In Romanian, English, and Spanish.   |