Trade

Can we exchange this movie for a better one about sex slaves?

By Matt Pais

September 26, 2007

 
Critic's Rating:
2 1/2

Trade
Photos:
A scene from the film "Trade." A scene from the film "Trade." A scene from the film "Trade." A scene from the film "Trade."
Trade
Running time:
119 minutes
Rated:
R
Cast:
Kevin Kline -
Ray
Cesar Ramos -
Jorge
Alicja Bachleda -
Veronica
Paulina Gaitan -
Adriana
Marco Pérez -
Manuelo
See full cast
Director:
Marco Kreuzpaintner
Genre:
Drama
Official Movie Web Site:
http://www.tradethemovie.com/
Movie Trailer:
Overall User Rating:
4 1/2 (16 ratings)
Be the first to review
After his 13-year-old sister Adriana is kidnapped in Mexico and brought into a network that traffics people as sex slaves, Jorge (Cesar Ramos) teams up with a cop (Kevin Kline) who's still searching for his similarly abducted daughter. Meanwhile, Adriana (Paulina Gaitan) and a young Polish mother (Alicja Bachleda) she befriends while in captivity work to support each other.

Big question: Can this upsetting drama, based on a true story, reveal the intricate dynamics of human trafficking and the strength and courage it takes to make it out alive?

Skip it: Not nearly as tense as the drug trafficking flick "Maria Full of Grace," "Trade" sometimes feels a bit like "Hostel 3" and sacrifices its sense of reality to deliver a conventional race against time and lines like, "We know where your son lives!" There's plenty of sympathy to be found for innocents sold as "goods" to generate upwards of $20,000 for their captors, but overly symbolic shots of a lone bike in the street and a doll with its head torn off don't do an already garbled cautionary tale any favors.

Catch it: To see that it doesn't take real weapons to commit a crime, as Jorge and his pals use water guns to rob unsuspecting tourists. Um, is that supposed to make us like Jorge more?

Bottom line: The best thing about "Trade" is that it exists at all, so hopefully more attention will be drawn to important real-life issues. As for how the sex trade developed, how it functions and how people can be sick enough to traffic in human lives, well, the movie can't help you there. 


Bonus:
As it ends, the flick tells us that 50,000-100,000 people fall prey to human trafficking in the U.S. each year, with more than 1 million sold around the world. If only the rest of "Trade" had as much valuable information!

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