The most noticeable
highlight of the film is the effulgent cinematography by Chris Chomyn
and the way the camera endows every scene with picturesque beauty.
Bright and dazzling colors are immediately apparent in every daytime
shot, and the vibrancy of the people and exotic locale is gushingly
aglow. The actors are likewise touched by bold hues, and everyone
in the film is radiant beyond what is witnessed in most recent films.
The fantasy elements are accentuated by this seemingly magical cinematography.
The film's main themes are that of destiny, fate, and the inability
to control it. Grecia is cursed - anyone who loves her will die
at the hands of the tempestuous sea. Sebastian, Benjamin’s
brother, and Marcelo create a love triangle with Grecia, but their
ill-fated romances are not the overwhelming central point of the
film. The romance between Grecia and Marcelo is favorable and
sweeping, but falls under the weight of the tenebrous powers and
mythological interventions of the sea. Her romance with Sebastian
is also forbidden, tragic, and cut short. By the unforeseeable
conclusion, the film will abandon many conventional viewers for
unpredictability - and perhaps dissatisfaction. What could have
been a commonplace romantic drama is heavily influenced by incredible
fantasy facets, which will discourage some and electrify those
with unbridled imaginations that match director Jose Bojorquez’s
passionate artistry.
Flashbacks to Grecia’s parents embarking on a journey across
the sea educate the audience on her origins, but they are subtle
and hallucinatory. They throw us out of the storyline much in
the same way the Day of the Dead celebration depicts ghosts of
the deceased roaming about town. The suspension of disbelief is
not strong enough to keep us following the fantasy elements, and
toward the end, fantasy is also abandoned for a semi-religious,
partially superstitious labyrinth of lore. But with melodic, uplifting
music by Luis Bacalov, and a pervasive personification of the
sea controlling destiny, even the disheartening inability of the
main characters prevailing over fate doesn’t stop Sea of
Dreams from being wholehearted entertainment, and a visually magical,
epic romance.
- Mike Massie