11 reviews
I had the opportunity of seeing Mango Tango at a recent festival. This is Ms. Hettinger's first film and we look forward to seeing what else she has in store.
The story follows the loves and travails of a young woman seeking her true love soul mate, as we follow this woman from one bad relationship to another, the coda is provided by our heroine eating mangoes in the tub. The tango part of the title comes from her work a day profession which is that of dance instructor and competitive ballroom/tango dancer.
At times it feels as though the story veers off into odd sub plots, but at its heart is the age old search for love in the large and slightly tilted world.
She has a singular vision and a lovely warm hearted touch in her writing.
It also contains one of the most acrobatic sex scenes we have ever witnessed.
Go see Mango Tango.
James Gettys -
The story follows the loves and travails of a young woman seeking her true love soul mate, as we follow this woman from one bad relationship to another, the coda is provided by our heroine eating mangoes in the tub. The tango part of the title comes from her work a day profession which is that of dance instructor and competitive ballroom/tango dancer.
At times it feels as though the story veers off into odd sub plots, but at its heart is the age old search for love in the large and slightly tilted world.
She has a singular vision and a lovely warm hearted touch in her writing.
It also contains one of the most acrobatic sex scenes we have ever witnessed.
Go see Mango Tango.
James Gettys -
- JamesGettys
- Jul 10, 2011
- Permalink
When the forerunner to the Queens World Film Festival asked me to introduce the feature Mango Tango I jumped on it. I knew very little about this new filmmaker who had such a vast experience as an actress and dancer on both sides of the Atlantic.
The film starts out in a linear fashion and before you know it an array of curve balls plays on our senses. And sensibilities. There is a scene in which our protagonist hesitates about making love as it is the 'wrong' time of the month. Well, it becomes a glorious tribute to the body, both male and female. To some this may be startling but I found it refreshing. And the humor!
All along, as this movie becomes less linear and more and more quirky, we find ourselves not certain about what is real and what is not. Until all the pieces of wild imagination become an overwhelming mass of other people's opinions on our heroine.
Are there some frames and lines that could be edited? Yes, but that doesn't take away from the entirety of this mosaic.
After the screening I had the pleasure of 'interviewing' several audience members who were extremely inspired. To many women, and also men, it was an inspiration that someone of Marianne Hettinger's beauty, would tell this kind of story as she is a long limbed European blonde with an exquisite silhouette and heck of a talent for dancing! It is assumed that she has the world by its balls. But no. Not until the end when she is free and so frees us.
I can't wait to see what this artist is cooking up next!
The film starts out in a linear fashion and before you know it an array of curve balls plays on our senses. And sensibilities. There is a scene in which our protagonist hesitates about making love as it is the 'wrong' time of the month. Well, it becomes a glorious tribute to the body, both male and female. To some this may be startling but I found it refreshing. And the humor!
All along, as this movie becomes less linear and more and more quirky, we find ourselves not certain about what is real and what is not. Until all the pieces of wild imagination become an overwhelming mass of other people's opinions on our heroine.
Are there some frames and lines that could be edited? Yes, but that doesn't take away from the entirety of this mosaic.
After the screening I had the pleasure of 'interviewing' several audience members who were extremely inspired. To many women, and also men, it was an inspiration that someone of Marianne Hettinger's beauty, would tell this kind of story as she is a long limbed European blonde with an exquisite silhouette and heck of a talent for dancing! It is assumed that she has the world by its balls. But no. Not until the end when she is free and so frees us.
I can't wait to see what this artist is cooking up next!
- julieberndt
- Mar 4, 2018
- Permalink
First the positive: the first five minutes, in a comic-book-meets-Allen kind of way aren't that bad. But really only the first five minutes.
The film does do what's on the tin: there's a great deal of tangoes and mangoes. I may suggest, tho, that an even more apt title would be "Me, myself and I" as the filmmaker can't resist putting herself in every single shot: she's practically photobombing her own movie.
I get the premise: to reveal the grotesque side of love stories through a heavy use of symbolism. Sadly, such good premise is betrayed almost immediately, and all we get is a lot of little boring dance numbers and wheelbarrows of self-indulgent rubbish. There are several recurring themes which don't mean absolutely anything: apart from the regular mango eating and tango dancing, we get excruciatingly long sequences, for example, of the protagonist just walking on a beach. Or frowning. Or looking in the far distance.
The bottom line is: you can't film yourself doing mundane things for one hour and a half and call it an art-house movie.
The bottom line is: you can't film yourself doing mundane things for one hour and a half and call it an art-house movie.
I got to see MANGO TANGO at the Queens International Film Festival where it was nominated for best Screenplay and Best Director for Marianne Hettinger. As far as I know, Marianne Hettinger directed, wrote, produced and acted in this film which turns out to be a strong feature film debut. The film moved me. It's about the search of a Manhattan dancer for the ideal mate. Instead of finding him she ends up with a bunch of neurotic, crazy guys. Not till the end does she realize that her strength and love lie within her and are not 'out there'. Ms. Hettinger reminds me of a female Woody Allen, she has her own quirky humor and style and her acting is superb. There was a lot of laughter in the audience until the film turned darker and more surreal after the first half and reminded me of many lost souls in a big city who will trust any therapist or healer but themselves. I also enjoyed a cameo by Michael E. Knight of 'All My Children' as a Southern Shaman- con artist, and Patrick Stephenson as her Ex-boyfriend. Great sound track and the dance pieces were beautiful. I felt moved by this film, that was done with a lot of talent and heart and I hope that it will find a distributor because it deserves to be seen by many!
- Vince-490-948094
- Sep 29, 2012
- Permalink
I had the pleasure of seeing "Mango Tango" at a movie theater in Berlin, Germany, where I've been living for a few years now. I really enjoyed being able to see the film in the original English version and was struck that the German audience was very responsive to the humor of the film. The writer/ director Ms. Hettinger was present at the screening. I loved the film, its originality, unique take on the New York singles scene and "looking for love in all the wrong places" which a lot of people can relate to, I'm sure. It is definitely an art house film. But rather than labeling it, it's a surreal, entertaining and visually very gratifying work. Wonderful acting by the lead actors, including Ms. Hettinger's performance, who manages to show a subtly and not so subtly nuanced performance. I loved Michael E. Knight, Emmy award winner and star of all My children as a fake preposterous Shaman with a light Southern accent. Many of the scenes are so hilarious: the Iowasca scene, a tantric sex scene in a way I've never seen before and not for the faint of heart and coconut rolling rituals to bust one's "karma". I love Ms. Hettinger's self deprecating humor and the deus ex machina ending which according to screen writing guru Robert McKee is a "no no", but really works in this absurd and touching film. But isn't life absurd most of the time?
- krishna333
- Feb 8, 2014
- Permalink
What I found interesting about this film is that the lead character, a New York City dance teacher, has an easy time dancing with men in harmony but in her private life it's a whole other story. She meets heart break after heart break. Somehow she manages to keep up her positive spirit though even though her life is in danger at one point. The filmmaker, Marianne Hettinger, takes risks to show her heroine's story: a love scene that goes quite far without showing too much, a straight man who channels a gay guy from Chelsea named Brian and a storyline that moves from New York to Germany. The look of the film is great for what must have been a small budget. I enjoyed watching a scene with the legendary dancer/choreographer David Parsons as well as Nicolas Kosovich, a Dancing With The Stars alumni.
- Theevidence51
- Mar 28, 2014
- Permalink
Mango Tango has many elements that make up an excellent film: the theme being a lonely woman's search for her soul mate in New York City and beyond (she ends up in the German Alps). Beyond the universal storyline, It's an aesthetically and acoustically pleasing film: a soundtrack by wonderful composers like Latin Grammy award winner Pablo Ziegler, Michael Bacon, violinist Philippe Quint, Martin St. Pierre and others . This here is a very independent film with heart. Wonderful "dance relief" scenes. The protagonist retrieves her lost soul through dancing. I won't give away the ending but it is surprising and absurd, keeping in style with the film.
- bohorquezduo
- Feb 12, 2014
- Permalink
- rsjones0131
- Feb 8, 2014
- Permalink
This film is the opposite of mainstream cinema. Unique and creative, powerful imagery and a heroine whose search efforts for her ideal mate go disturbingly wrong in a sometimes humorous and disturbing way. The filmmaker has a unique vision and voice- The film is very ambitious and sometimes seems more a series of vignettes rather than one plot, but the power of the images and beautifully crafted soundtrack, acting and dialogue and of course dance scenes, that are like a dance relief sequence, all work beautifully. The contrast of the scenes in New York and the German Alps are a wonderful juxta -position- I was rooting for the heroine to find her man, but she found something more important, herself.
- sibille-21-169223
- Jun 6, 2014
- Permalink
I am very impressed with this 1st effort by this extremely talented and stunningly beautiful director-writer-actress-dancer-singer-pianist !! I was blown away by the originality of the writing, the quirckiness of the humor and the character development, the bravery of the actors, the quality and integration of the music, the authentic and honest choreography, and the cleanliness and simplicity of the cinematography.
I laughed , and sighed, and felt my heart open to the sadness and frustration and joy and exhiliration of this woman's life situation around men.
And her efforts to process and grow through these experiences was a pleasure and honor to watch. The willingness of this lead actress to "expose" all parts of herself to us all is commendable.!
The integration of fantasy and reality , I believe , served us as an audience, in keeping us involved in the lead character's inner thoughts and some of her logic for the choices she made . I look forward to seeing the sophomore project by this director..
- randyweiss
- Mar 3, 2018
- Permalink
The film starts out being quite funny and quirky with a European feel to it. Wonderful talent here, in terms of acting- including a cameo by AMC's Emmy award winning actor Michael E. Knight as a pretend Shaman and music by Latin Grammy award winner Pablo Ziegler. 3/4 in the film could have used some editing. Otherwise a fun experience.
- mariannehettinger
- Jan 20, 2018
- Permalink