Yo no sé qué me han hecho tus ojos (2003) Poster

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7/10
A Nostalgic and Heartfelft Effort
pdx35252 October 2005
Ada Falcon was a talented and popular Argentine tango singer of the 1920s and 1930s. She performed with the country's best musicians, starred on national radio shows, and appeared in movies shown across Latin America. In 1942, however, Falcon abruptly left show business and never performed again.

Before dropping out of sight, she led a glamorous, lavish life and reportedly counted tango star Carlos Gardel and Argentine composer Francisco Canero among her lovers. Falcon's green eyes fascinated both men and her fans, too. Those same eyes inspired the tango that serves as the title of this documentary by Argentine filmmaker Sergio Wolf.

Falcon's disappearance and the rumors surrounding it intrigue Wolf and he sets out to learn more about the singer's career and her later life. With a cameraman in tow, Wolf visits the theaters and radio studios where Falcon once sang and the homes and cities where she lived. He also talks to musicians, neighbors, and others who knew Falcon and includes clips from her movies and concerts.

This nostalgic and heartfelt effort will likely enthrall both Argentines of a certain age and hardcore tango fans of the period. Others may find the subject too obscure, but they will certainly be fascinated by Wolf's discovery of how Falcon spent the last half of a very long life that ended with entombment in Recoleta, the most famous and exclusive cemetery in Buenos Aires.

7/10
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8/10
Ghosts of tango
birthdaynoodle11 October 2011
"I Don't Know What Your Eyes Have Done to Me" follows the life of once famous tango singer and actress Ada Falcón, illicit lover of composer Francisco Canaro and perhaps of the legendary Carlos Gardel. The title refers to a song inspired by Ada's seductive, green eyes. A big star in the 30s, she suddenly disappeared without a word in the 40s and was never seen again. A variety of photographs and film clips offer a taste of the glamour that characterized her days in the limelight, while surviving witnesses in current day Argentina are asked to shed some light on her motives for leaving behind her successful career. Could heartbreak or a spiritual quest for God have been the cause of her mysterious departure? The directors try to put together the pieces of the puzzle in what feels like an eerily nostalgic, contemplative and beautifully narrated detective story inhabited by spirits of the past. Some viewers may be turned off by the film's slow pace and relatively muted presentation. Others will be fascinated by its very personal approach towards Ada and its meditation on tango, human emotions and the passing of time.
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the myth and the time
boudu_sauve_des_eaux9 February 2004
Warning: Spoilers
major spoilers herein)

During '30s , Tango Music was at its peak of popularity in Buenos Aires and the singer Ada Falcon was the diva among the divas. The tango 'I don't know what your eyes have made me' is dedicated to her. Famous, young and sucessful, there was a general surprise feeling in the public opinion when she decided, supposedly due to a mystic conversion, to sell her mansion, her convertible and her jewels and retire to live only with her mother to a town in the country. Then, the myth began, and reporters try unsuccesfully to talk to her, to know the real causes of her retirement (there were gossips about a love affair) receiving only negatives. The golden era of Tango passed and she's finally forgotten by almost everybody.

Year 2000, Two filmmakers began to make a documentary about Ada Falcon. Most of her movies are lost, and the city has changed completely. In the course of the investigation, they find Ada alive, 95 years old, almost deaf, completely forgotten inside a catholic geriatric. Maybe they were her first visit in years.

The movie works as a nice reflexion about the impossibility of collective memory ('there no exist color images of her famous green eyes') , and the final irrelevance of all(Ms. Falcon is clearly happy talking about her life as a singer, an old lady remembering her youth, but she's still reluctant to say something about her retirement). Ada Falcon died shortly after the interview with the filmmakers.
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