| Index | 7 reviews in total |
13 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
One of the greatest films I've seen, 13 August 2001
Author:
vkorovkin from Moscow, Russia
Already from the opening scene of tango dance on a Paris bridge one can understand that this is an outstanding film. Pain, sorrow, laugh, sex, solitude, nostalgia, music - all about the exiliados' life in Paris. And if you know a bit of Spanish the lyrics of the songs will stay long with you.
11 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
virtually unknown masterpiece, 20 March 2002
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Author:
Arnoldo Valdez from chicago
I saw a print of this film in a Latin American class a few years ago and was blown away." Who was the director?" was my question. It combined elements of Godard, Bertulucci, and the American musical. The images are as stunning as any by Vittorio Storraro and the story is ultimately uplifting and hopeful as it details the lives of Argentine exiles trying to survive and move on with their lives while in exile in Paris. Brilliant , but virtually unavailable in the states. This film needs to be discovered by film lovers and lovers of the tango.
8 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Pure Tango. Pure Cinema., 9 October 2003
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Author:
mikatzin from São Paulo, Brazil
Solanas made a wonderful piece of art, not just a movie, but a theater
play
and a tango as well.
The anguish of exile, trying to show all the melancholy charged with irony
and good humor. As a Discépolo's tango.
Marvelous, oneiric. A way to learn more about this kind of music that is
famous around the world as "the dance of passion", but showed in its pure
essence, with three of its' men, Gardel, Discépolo and
Piazzolla.
6 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Wallflowers, 4 July 2007
Author:
tedg (tedg@FilmsFolded.com) from Virginia Beach
Being a branch on the Spanish film-making tree, Argentines have no
problem with the idea of blending a show within a movie, to the world
of the movie itself, and then to the world outside the movie in which
the viewer lives.
I call this folding.
I came to this because I knew it had this quality. And that it had
something else that fascinates me: dance. Filmed dance is one of the
most intriguing problems for a filmmaker and rewarding for a viewer. I
love it when it works.
Also, I discovered on viewing that it plays with a related notion: that
you cannot really see something that you are part of. You have to be in
a fold, removed a bit. And it has yet another notion that compels. Sex
as movement, as choreographed caress between two people who have poise
that comes from wisdom through grace or pain, usually a mix. Its not a
typical Hispanic idea, and is unique to Argentina, a philosophy of
embodiment that corresponds in a way to fine acting. This alone, this
one idea alone can melt the cauterized heart, and when experienced in
life or remembered in art is transforming.
Yes, this film has all these ideas in it. Probably, the filmmaker is
one of those wonderful people to know, full of ideas that spill out in
ways that don't matter. Any intelligent, or fully felt conversation on
any of these ideas will be more valuable than this movie. In fact, that
is yet another idea here, that real touch has no substitute. None at
all.
Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
6 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
What an inspiring film!, 26 October 2002
Author:
Alexander Charner (culebrito@mac.com) from Brooklyn, NY
I found a video version of this exquisite Tanguedia (tango + tragedia) in the Avery Fisher Center of the NYU Bobst Library. Looking for insights into the life of Carlos Gardel, I found something infinitely more powerful. An entertaining, heartbreaking film that brought me a greater appreciation of my love of tango and the sadness of exile. The film tells the story of Argentinian exiles in Paris. People of artistic talent and temperament who come together to create a stage musical about the tangos of Gardel's exile. The fact that Gardel was never (historically) exiled from Argentina adds a little subversive mystery to the film. If I could find a print of the film I could probably provide a more detailed review. I guess this film is doomed to join "Love me Tonight" and countless other amazing works of musical film, spending eternity eluding the eyes of the viewing public, collecting dust in film monasteries. ¡Qué tanguedia!
0 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Tango related but obnoxious, 20 April 2010
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Author:
laojim from Arizona
The look and the sound of this film are quite good and the dancing is
excellent. I have, however, a serious reservation about this film
related to the culturally outdated elements in that it is not focused
so much on Tango per se, but on Apache, a dance once popular in Paris
ballrooms but which was more or less banned after some women were, it
is said, killed in the process of dancing.
Let me explain.
The street toughs of Paris, once named for the famous Arizona Indian
tribe, the Apache (commonly called ah-Patch-ee) were know as the Apache
(pronounced ah-Pash) The dance, known as the Apache was a ballroom
curiosity based on a theatrical dance in which, in the standard form,
the woman plays the role of the prostitute unwilling to share her wages
with her pimp who then proceeds to beat her up in a graceful and, no
doubt, elevated artistic manner. This lead to the death of some
dancers.
This is the basis of several of the dances in this film. One wonders
why, in the early part of the twenty first century one should
anticipate being entertained by the artful beating of exploited women,
even when that abuse is meted out to the graceful strains of the
Argentinian Tango on the streets of Paris, France.
One may argue, of course, that this is a product of a different
cultural place and time and that it might be inappropriate to be
judgmental about the customs of far away places like Paris and Buenos
Aires. According to this point of view the Apache is a cultural
artifact, like slavery or cock fighting, to be admired as pure art. If
that is true then perhaps the advocates would like to recast the Apache
into a less obnoxiously offensive form, such as the passionate rivalry
of a young mother and her confessor, or something of the sort.
I understand that the Apache is almost entirely forgotten outside of
France and Argentina although it has recently popped up in Moulin
Rouge, in Tango, a film by Carlos Saura, and in various music videos. I
had some correspondence on this point when a remarkably Apache like
video was produced for a song by the Italian singer Elisa Toffoli which
appeared to have her being beaten up by her boy friend.
In the present time the abuse of women is largely confined to some rap
videos and similar creations, such as "Slap my Bith Up" by, if memory
serves correctly, Underworld.
Is it not time to consign this sort of thing to the mists of history?
2 out of 21 people found the following review useful:
Utterly Forgettable Diatribe, 23 November 2001
Author:
235SCOPE from United States
Impossibly boring, self-indulgent, presumptuous Argentine film "a-la-francaise". The characters are poorly developed, the situations are artificially written, and the movie goes nowhere. Hard to believe anyone could care about this except the director. This is one to miss at all cost.
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