“Cost of Rica” -- 2 out of 4.5 stars
By: Mike Longbert, Movie Reviewer for NewBridge New Herald:
Movies about child labor exploitation are few and far between, and this mediocre film will do nothing to reverse the trend.
A Los Angeles-based Hawaiian shirt manufacturer, played by Roy Orbison, has moved his factory to Costa Rica in search of cheaper labor and laxer regulations. Heading Orbison’s factory is former California surfing sensation, Ray Romano, who, the movie informs us, won a surfing Olympic gold medal at the tender age of 11. The roles are clichéd: Orbison is the evil exploiter with no shades of grey to his character, while Romano plays the man with a conscience, who gets to show his insecurities and pangs over the choices he takes. The plot is quite simple. Orbison catches the rumor that a reporter from the states is posing as a child worker and filming the factory’s conditions for a documentary. Orbinson gives Romano the task of finding and eliminating the mole. Orbison and Romano first suspect Julio, the young Costa Rican boy played amazingly well by chameleon Tilda Swinton. Swinton’s character has been taking surfing lessons from Romano and the two have developed friendship, as Romano states, “based on the pure love of the curl, man.” [**Spolier Alert**] The film’s great “reveal,” after Romano must choose between his pay and his conscience, is that the mole was not Swinton; it was actually Amy Sedaris posing as a twelve-year-old seamstress. Despite the film's flaws, the soundtrack, by the band Zeke, is powerfully affecting and works well with the lush rain forest images.
John Hodgman
Frank Stallone
Kate Hudson