28 out of 31 people found the following comment useful :- Exceptional ode to silent cinema., 4 February 2007
Author:
Camera Obscura from Leiden, The Dutch Mountains
LA ANTENA (Esteban Sapir - Argentina 2005).
A completely unique take on silent cinema in this fairy-tale like story
by Esteban Sapir, beautifully shot in black-and-white and practically
without dialog, "La Antena" is a feast for the eye and a must for
lovers of German expressionist cinema, with most of the nods to the
works of Fritz Lang and Friedrich Murnau.
'The City without a Voice', 'La Ciudad sin Voz', is ruled by Mr. TV. He
has taken the inhabitants voices and is in total control of all spoken
words and images, forcing everyone to eat his own brand of TV-food. Mr
TV is not just a monopolist, he is the personification of evil and
totalitarianism, even the swastika appears as a symbol a number of
times. He secretly works on a hypnotizing device to control all the
citizens minds through his television broadcasts. For this purpose, he
kidnaps the only one left with The Voice, a beautiful singer, but a TV
repairman witnesses the kidnapping and flees to an old TV antenna in
the mountains in order to halt Mr. TV's evil plans.
The production design is stunning with beautiful sets and imagery.
Although shot primarily with the basic language of silent cinema,
Esteban Sapir also adds a number of fresh techniques of his own, like a
combination of typographic and animation techniques. Everyone talks
with each other through text balloons (usually floating near their
mouths), the louder they talk, the larger the characters. The texts
themselves can be pushed away or crushed. In the opening sequence, we
see a book, titled "La Antena", that opens and a city of paper rises
from the pages. There are hardly any references to Argentina. It's
constantly snowing, which gives the film a very un-Argeninian feel,
while the surreal setting suggests any large city in the Northen
hemisphere, with only some of the songs revealing the film's
Argentinian background.
The pace is swift and there is so much happening on screen, it's hard
to keep track of the film's surreal narrative. Not only breathtakingly
beautiful to look at, we're also given a few messages about media
monopolies, corruption and totalitarianism, but they are breezily
packaged. One of the most original films I've seen in years. A delight.
The film was shown as the opening film at the IFF Rotterdam 2007.
Camera Obscura --- 9/10
8 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Allegory on Muteness, 7 June 2007
Author:
blosmelinda from Romania
I've seen this movie twice on Transilvania International Film
Festival(TIFF), the movie is in competition and I really hope that
Esteban Sapir will get one of the awards (at least the best image
award).
As a silent cinema fan I'm interested in contemporary movies that quote
or recreate the language of the yester-year cinema. The previous
reviewer emphasized the quotes from Fritz Lang and Fr. W. Murnau. As I
see it, the movie references directly Lang's Metropolis, and the
allegorical-parabolic character of his plots. But I didn't see Murnau
in it. There's a more obvious Melies-homage though: the Moon with a
(here cigar-smoking) human face, and the paper-made, painted mountains
and city-landscapes. I enjoyed the film mostly for its visuals, and in
the meantime I found very interesting the story on muteness, and the
creative means of communication used by the inhabitants of the
voiceless city. From this perspective this movie is an unique reflexion
on the muteness of the silent cinema, because in the films of the
silent period one can hardly find stories with mute characters. In this
case can be questioned whether the story on the stolen voices was the
motivation for the silent film form, or there's an intention to play
upon the muteness of the silent films. Another example of this kind of
reflexion I found in Guy Maddin's Careful,where the inhabitants of a
mountain-village have restrictions in using their voices. I intend to
write a paper on it, if you know movies related to this topic, please
let me know!!!
I highly recommend Esteban Sapir's film to every moviegoer (one of the
critics called it: the jewel of the festival).
PS: Winners were announced, and the film won the award for best
cinematography!
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Fascism versus Judaism, or God versus Satan?, 8 July 2008
Author:
awardknott from Exeter, England
This is a beautiful film to look at. Surreal and kitsch, its many
homages were maybe a little too obvious - yes, Lang, Melies, even
Chaplin. This allegory on Argentinian and German fascism initially
buried the real story beneath its look - that of a complex animated
commercial. However, as the film progressed, it soon become obvious to
me the symbolism of the scars on the family's hands (stigmata), the
blind boy who could talk and would save the city / world (Jesus
Christ), the boy's single mother (Mary), the young girl (Mary
Magdalene), and ultimately the boy on the Star of David, reflected a
world in which religion / Judaism / Jesus Christ, vanquished the evils
of fascism / Satan.
So maybe a little heavy on the symbolism and allegory, ideas of
religion saving the world or prophets dying to save us from our sins
are all a little lazy. As many directors have shown, revealing religion
for the corrupt and superstitious organisations they really are, can
make a much more satisfactory cinema experience; see Bunuel / Fellini /
Bergman.
3 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- expressionist allegory, 10 November 2007
Author:
delta_vega from Los Angeles, USA
For those who appreciate the intersection of silent cinema and social
commentary, this is a unique film. Part homage to German expressionism,
part allegory, the film is replete with visual symbolism and an
artistic style that rivals anything seen since the 1920's. Moreover,
the attention to period detail and the visual composition of the scenes
as an instrument for advancing the story is stunning. Aside from this,
the plot offers an interesting commentary on the role of the media in
society and its effect on social voice, perception, and opinion. In
truth, it's not so much the silence that permeates the film as it is
the loss of voice and the loss of words to communicate and express
thought that inevitably follows. In sum, this film is something not
often seen and, as the producer of the film said in the Q&A that
followed, will leave you thinking about its meaning well into the next
day.
5 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Quiet and good looking, 8 October 2007
Author:
kosmasp
The summary line is some men's wet dream for the ideal woman ... ;o)
Seriously though, back to the movie, which has classic cinema written
all over it (pun intended and quite literally shown in the picture, too
as you'll see)!
How could someone make a silent movie in this year and age? It's not
completely silent for once (take the music for instance). With great
cinematography is the answer. And it's no wonder that it did win prizes
(as another user stated) in this area! But it's also sometimes it's
downfall. Although the pictures are great, it sometimes delves too much
in them instead of moving forward (plot and time wise). If you can cope
with that, than you'll enjoy it even more than me. I haven't told you
anything about the story, but I'll never do that, because I don't want
to spoiler anything for you ...
A reinvention of the silent movie and a powerful cautionary tale, 23 July 2008
Author:
Robert_Woodward from United Kingdom
La Antena, an audacious film by Argentine director Esteban Sapir,
succeeds both as a reinvention of the silent movie genre and a gripping
cautionary tale. The setting is a city in thrall to mindless
television, its people deprived of the power of speech except for a
solitary and mysterious screen presence known simply as The Voice. In a
bid to cement their grip on power the marvellously villainous duo of
television mogul Mr. TV and mad scientist Dr. Y set out to kidnap The
Voice and turn her unique talent towards their own dastardly ends. It
is up to a young family and The Voice's nameless, eyeless son to stop
this evil scheme. The result is a roller coaster of a story that is
bewildering on occasion but never less than engrossing.
This is a silent movie that wears many of its influences on its sleeve;
the overt references to silent movie greats such as George Melies and
Fritz Lang will be readily apparent to anyone with a passing
familiarity of their work. But more subtle references and symbolism lie
behind such tributes. I particularly like the fact that Mr. TV and his
henchman drive around in typical 1930s gangster cars, drawn from the
decade when the silent movie era died away and a very different
industry began to emerge.
La Antena mines the clichéd plot devices and theatrical over-acting
common to so many silent films, albeit in a very knowing and humorous
way. It is the astonishing visual style of La Antena that really sets
it apart from the movies that it pays homage to. From the hypnotic TV
logo to the menacing hilltop transmission station, this film abounds
with dazzling visual inventiveness that is the rival of a Studio Ghibli
animation and all this using real actors and handmade sets.
Moreover, though the style is often intentionally corny and theatrical,
this is still an unsettling, provocative and emotional picture. The use
of religious symbolism throughout La Antena lends added resonance to
the struggle between the TV Empire and the waning power of words. At
the same time, many of the most powerful images are original ones,
including the hypnotic swirl of the television sets and the nightmarish
TV food factory.
I hate to end this review on a sour note, but I feel that the
English-language release of La Antena is let down by the subtitles. The
original Spanish subtitles are used to great effect, with much playing
around with words on screen. However, the English-language subtitles
that accompany the original dialogue are frustratingly incomplete, with
omissions and mistakes at times leaving the viewer to piece things
together for themselves. La Antena is nevertheless a striking piece of
cinema; a visually breathtaking experience that displays great energy
and humour whilst narrating a powerful cautionary tale.
3 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- A perfect homage to early silent noir Films., 29 July 2007
Author:
bne982 from Germany
I didn't see such a movie where the creators put so much heart's blood
into their work and paid attention to the finest details for a very
long time.
Everything was well thought and perfectly put into reality.
Camera-work, editing and compositing worked so good together it was
just amazing. The titles were so fun and so perfectly choreographed.
This movie just blew me away.
The "Showdown" could have been cut down by 10 or 15 minutes though.
It's a near to perfect homage to early silent noir Films story, acting,
scenery and costumes were perfectly fitting and believable to have com
from the times of silent film-making.
2 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- Release on DVD in US?, 20 January 2008
Author:
bradner3 from United States
This movie is great. I had a chance to see it at the Chicago Film
Festival - by accident really. I was going to see an Austrailian film,
but the file was pulled from the festival moments before I got to the
box office. The ticket person suggested this movie stating that it was
selling a lot of tickets.
Does anyone know if and when this will be released on DVD in the
States? I have found it on Amazon Germany - but I do not have a way to
play the region 2 DVD.
I have also emailed the distributor several times.
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Antena, La (2007)
28 out of 31 people found the following comment useful :-

Exceptional ode to silent cinema., 4 February 2007
Author: Camera Obscura from Leiden, The Dutch Mountains
LA ANTENA (Esteban Sapir - Argentina 2005).
A completely unique take on silent cinema in this fairy-tale like story by Esteban Sapir, beautifully shot in black-and-white and practically without dialog, "La Antena" is a feast for the eye and a must for lovers of German expressionist cinema, with most of the nods to the works of Fritz Lang and Friedrich Murnau.
'The City without a Voice', 'La Ciudad sin Voz', is ruled by Mr. TV. He has taken the inhabitants voices and is in total control of all spoken words and images, forcing everyone to eat his own brand of TV-food. Mr TV is not just a monopolist, he is the personification of evil and totalitarianism, even the swastika appears as a symbol a number of times. He secretly works on a hypnotizing device to control all the citizens minds through his television broadcasts. For this purpose, he kidnaps the only one left with The Voice, a beautiful singer, but a TV repairman witnesses the kidnapping and flees to an old TV antenna in the mountains in order to halt Mr. TV's evil plans.
The production design is stunning with beautiful sets and imagery. Although shot primarily with the basic language of silent cinema, Esteban Sapir also adds a number of fresh techniques of his own, like a combination of typographic and animation techniques. Everyone talks with each other through text balloons (usually floating near their mouths), the louder they talk, the larger the characters. The texts themselves can be pushed away or crushed. In the opening sequence, we see a book, titled "La Antena", that opens and a city of paper rises from the pages. There are hardly any references to Argentina. It's constantly snowing, which gives the film a very un-Argeninian feel, while the surreal setting suggests any large city in the Northen hemisphere, with only some of the songs revealing the film's Argentinian background.
The pace is swift and there is so much happening on screen, it's hard to keep track of the film's surreal narrative. Not only breathtakingly beautiful to look at, we're also given a few messages about media monopolies, corruption and totalitarianism, but they are breezily packaged. One of the most original films I've seen in years. A delight.
The film was shown as the opening film at the IFF Rotterdam 2007.
Camera Obscura --- 9/10
8 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-

Allegory on Muteness, 7 June 2007
Author: blosmelinda from Romania
I've seen this movie twice on Transilvania International Film Festival(TIFF), the movie is in competition and I really hope that Esteban Sapir will get one of the awards (at least the best image award).
As a silent cinema fan I'm interested in contemporary movies that quote or recreate the language of the yester-year cinema. The previous reviewer emphasized the quotes from Fritz Lang and Fr. W. Murnau. As I see it, the movie references directly Lang's Metropolis, and the allegorical-parabolic character of his plots. But I didn't see Murnau in it. There's a more obvious Melies-homage though: the Moon with a (here cigar-smoking) human face, and the paper-made, painted mountains and city-landscapes. I enjoyed the film mostly for its visuals, and in the meantime I found very interesting the story on muteness, and the creative means of communication used by the inhabitants of the voiceless city. From this perspective this movie is an unique reflexion on the muteness of the silent cinema, because in the films of the silent period one can hardly find stories with mute characters. In this case can be questioned whether the story on the stolen voices was the motivation for the silent film form, or there's an intention to play upon the muteness of the silent films. Another example of this kind of reflexion I found in Guy Maddin's Careful,where the inhabitants of a mountain-village have restrictions in using their voices. I intend to write a paper on it, if you know movies related to this topic, please let me know!!!
I highly recommend Esteban Sapir's film to every moviegoer (one of the critics called it: the jewel of the festival).
PS: Winners were announced, and the film won the award for best cinematography!
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Fascism versus Judaism, or God versus Satan?, 8 July 2008
Author: awardknott from Exeter, England
This is a beautiful film to look at. Surreal and kitsch, its many homages were maybe a little too obvious - yes, Lang, Melies, even Chaplin. This allegory on Argentinian and German fascism initially buried the real story beneath its look - that of a complex animated commercial. However, as the film progressed, it soon become obvious to me the symbolism of the scars on the family's hands (stigmata), the blind boy who could talk and would save the city / world (Jesus Christ), the boy's single mother (Mary), the young girl (Mary Magdalene), and ultimately the boy on the Star of David, reflected a world in which religion / Judaism / Jesus Christ, vanquished the evils of fascism / Satan.
So maybe a little heavy on the symbolism and allegory, ideas of religion saving the world or prophets dying to save us from our sins are all a little lazy. As many directors have shown, revealing religion for the corrupt and superstitious organisations they really are, can make a much more satisfactory cinema experience; see Bunuel / Fellini / Bergman.
3 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-

expressionist allegory, 10 November 2007
Author: delta_vega from Los Angeles, USA
For those who appreciate the intersection of silent cinema and social commentary, this is a unique film. Part homage to German expressionism, part allegory, the film is replete with visual symbolism and an artistic style that rivals anything seen since the 1920's. Moreover, the attention to period detail and the visual composition of the scenes as an instrument for advancing the story is stunning. Aside from this, the plot offers an interesting commentary on the role of the media in society and its effect on social voice, perception, and opinion. In truth, it's not so much the silence that permeates the film as it is the loss of voice and the loss of words to communicate and express thought that inevitably follows. In sum, this film is something not often seen and, as the producer of the film said in the Q&A that followed, will leave you thinking about its meaning well into the next day.
5 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-

Quiet and good looking, 8 October 2007
Author: kosmasp
The summary line is some men's wet dream for the ideal woman ... ;o) Seriously though, back to the movie, which has classic cinema written all over it (pun intended and quite literally shown in the picture, too as you'll see)!
How could someone make a silent movie in this year and age? It's not completely silent for once (take the music for instance). With great cinematography is the answer. And it's no wonder that it did win prizes (as another user stated) in this area! But it's also sometimes it's downfall. Although the pictures are great, it sometimes delves too much in them instead of moving forward (plot and time wise). If you can cope with that, than you'll enjoy it even more than me. I haven't told you anything about the story, but I'll never do that, because I don't want to spoiler anything for you ...
A reinvention of the silent movie and a powerful cautionary tale, 23 July 2008

Author: Robert_Woodward from United Kingdom
La Antena, an audacious film by Argentine director Esteban Sapir, succeeds both as a reinvention of the silent movie genre and a gripping cautionary tale. The setting is a city in thrall to mindless television, its people deprived of the power of speech except for a solitary and mysterious screen presence known simply as The Voice. In a bid to cement their grip on power the marvellously villainous duo of television mogul Mr. TV and mad scientist Dr. Y set out to kidnap The Voice and turn her unique talent towards their own dastardly ends. It is up to a young family and The Voice's nameless, eyeless son to stop this evil scheme. The result is a roller coaster of a story that is bewildering on occasion but never less than engrossing.
This is a silent movie that wears many of its influences on its sleeve; the overt references to silent movie greats such as George Melies and Fritz Lang will be readily apparent to anyone with a passing familiarity of their work. But more subtle references and symbolism lie behind such tributes. I particularly like the fact that Mr. TV and his henchman drive around in typical 1930s gangster cars, drawn from the decade when the silent movie era died away and a very different industry began to emerge.
La Antena mines the clichéd plot devices and theatrical over-acting common to so many silent films, albeit in a very knowing and humorous way. It is the astonishing visual style of La Antena that really sets it apart from the movies that it pays homage to. From the hypnotic TV logo to the menacing hilltop transmission station, this film abounds with dazzling visual inventiveness that is the rival of a Studio Ghibli animation and all this using real actors and handmade sets.
Moreover, though the style is often intentionally corny and theatrical, this is still an unsettling, provocative and emotional picture. The use of religious symbolism throughout La Antena lends added resonance to the struggle between the TV Empire and the waning power of words. At the same time, many of the most powerful images are original ones, including the hypnotic swirl of the television sets and the nightmarish TV food factory.
I hate to end this review on a sour note, but I feel that the English-language release of La Antena is let down by the subtitles. The original Spanish subtitles are used to great effect, with much playing around with words on screen. However, the English-language subtitles that accompany the original dialogue are frustratingly incomplete, with omissions and mistakes at times leaving the viewer to piece things together for themselves. La Antena is nevertheless a striking piece of cinema; a visually breathtaking experience that displays great energy and humour whilst narrating a powerful cautionary tale.
3 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-

A perfect homage to early silent noir Films., 29 July 2007
Author: bne982 from Germany
I didn't see such a movie where the creators put so much heart's blood into their work and paid attention to the finest details for a very long time.
Everything was well thought and perfectly put into reality. Camera-work, editing and compositing worked so good together it was just amazing. The titles were so fun and so perfectly choreographed.
This movie just blew me away.
The "Showdown" could have been cut down by 10 or 15 minutes though.
It's a near to perfect homage to early silent noir Films story, acting, scenery and costumes were perfectly fitting and believable to have com from the times of silent film-making.
2 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-
Release on DVD in US?, 20 January 2008
Author: bradner3 from United States
This movie is great. I had a chance to see it at the Chicago Film Festival - by accident really. I was going to see an Austrailian film, but the file was pulled from the festival moments before I got to the box office. The ticket person suggested this movie stating that it was selling a lot of tickets.
Does anyone know if and when this will be released on DVD in the States? I have found it on Amazon Germany - but I do not have a way to play the region 2 DVD.
I have also emailed the distributor several times.
Any suggestions you can provide will be helpful.
Add another comment
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