Babel is a film hard to pin down, because even if it is not really anything interesting, it's a lot of it happens. Film Series in the middle stories are all connected devices via convenient little, a female American tourist was shot during a vacation in Morocco. Who shot him, how they got the gun that he did, and what happens to a person in a relationship with her is the result of his effort to push for the screenwriter Guillermo Arriaga is lost in a series otherwise completely disconnected stories of people completely different from all over the world.
With a name like Babel, you expect a picture of the language and culture and divided nations in the world, causes misunderstandings, and pulling the humanity of the other. If there is anything that thematically relevant buried somewhere in the film, I could not find it. The title seems to be nothing more than a reference surface to the number of languages spoken by various characters in the film.
Together, we can see how the story of an American husband wounded in the fighting to save his life, powerless in a small village in the middle of the desert, hell. In the second, we follow a Moroccan boy idiot shot him in the Lark, as she tries to escape responsibility for his crime is complete stupidity. In North America, we see how children of a few tourists are drawn to a wild wedding in Mexico for their immigrant nanny, because their parents are not home to take them out of the hands. Japan, the film follows the sexual-up of 16 years, deaf Japanese schoolgirl while he wanders the city looking for someone, anyone, to take her virginity.
Babel is beautifully shot, wonderfully performed by a group of Hollywood actors and international variety. Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett play a couple of tourists, and are probably the only faces you'll recognize immediately. This does not mean that dominate the film, however, everyone given a place to shine. It is the dream of a player in general, a series of viginettes linked together in a way that maximizes your time on the screen.
Individually, the short stories of the film have a lot of depth to them. Stitched together into a single device itself, they form a film that is actually quite shallow. If you want to combine so many different stories into one story, then you need to have some sort of purpose in doing so. It seems to be one of Babel, there's no deeper theme or main idea that connects all these stories together.
Babel is a movie instead of a more just because of weakness, the plot devised. A shotgun in the desert is not a problem, it is an event. Most of the stories in the film are associated with this event, but for some reason it takes almost the entire film of 142 minutes of run time and a lot of nudity schoolgirl to find the end (and rather lame) link between Japanese history, and impact. Once discovered, it is incredibly disappointing.
If you take something away from this film, it would probably be that foreigners are not trustworthy, because the film's narrative is built around a stereotypical white family is abused, injured and almost killed by well-intentioned stupidity cultural Japanese businessmen, Mexican and Moroccan. Babel is depressing, long, boring, there is not much of a story, and if she tries to say something that I could not hear it.