The Year of Fury (2020) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
A choral and interesting film about a group of characters to show how they lived through that turbulent period in Uruguay history.
ma-cortes26 January 2024
Montevideo, 1972. The life of the writers of a television program in Uruguay is affected by the pressures of the military in the year that preceded the military coup of 1973. While the country slides irremediably towards the precipice of dictatorship, Diego (Alberto Ammann) and Leonardo (Joaquin Furriel), two scriptwriters of a well-known television program, fight to maintain their integrity in the face of pressure from their superiors to tone down their biting satires. Their freedom of expression is in danger, even a soldier who tortures people (Daniel Grao) and who maintains a relationship with a prostitute (Martina Gusmán) to forget about his atrocious acts. Almost all of them meet in a boarding house run by a Spanish woman (Maribel Verdú), mother of a young political fighter (Sara Sálamo). Policies and avoid offending the senior military who are taking control of the country. At the same time, on the side of the oppressors, Rojas, an army lieutenant who has been pressured to torture militants or sympathizers of the Tupamaros guerrilla, exorcises his demons with Susana, a prostitute with whom he finds a kind of emotional refuge from his guilty feeling. Little by little, the confluent lives of the scriptwriters and the soldier are deeply affected by the yoke of the dictatorship that is closing in on them, and both one and the others struggle to find an escape, a dignified exit that allows them to hold their gaze before the mirror.

This tense and nail-biting thriller is packed with as much taut action, enjoyable message as the storyline will allow , but let down at times . Engaging and raw film being compellingly shot , adding some political moments and its allegedly wave flag of impartiality cannot obscure the tension dripping from every frame of such reconstructed immediacy . A strong and hard drama with political touches, including emotion, violence, tortures and sex scenes. Although there are some confusing moments among the strongly character-driven plot, Russo who has acknowledged his admiration for Peter Weir's The Year of Living Dangerously, or Robert Spottiwoode's Under Fire, two mythical titles with which he shares his tone and intentions has been able to depict the complex personality of each of them, without censoring their crudest or most dramatic moments. Thus portraying how these tense events brought out the best and worst in humanity, but without overlooking all the nuances in between. There's a swarm of peculiar roles, types and behaviors, which sets and narrates an Uruguay historical episode. The main story about Lieutenant Rojas monopolizes mostly attention, while the other subplots, languish and are narrated in ups and downs. It has its good moments starred by a superb Latin main and support actors, this multicultural cast contributes to giving credibility to these characters such as: Alberto Ammann, Joaquín Furriel, Daniel Grao, Martina Gusmán, Sara Sálamo, Paula Cancio, Miguel Ángel Solá, Stefanie Neukirch, Maribel Verdú and Daniel Freire.

With exteriors filmed in Montevideo , a city in which the monuments and streets of the period in which the action of this feature film takes place are preserved intact), and interiors filmed in Madrid, The Year of Fury exudes an air of thriller by portraying how fear gradually poisoned not only professional relationships, but also romantic ones and friendships.

The movie belongs to sub-genre that abounded in the 80s about reporters covering dangerous political conflicts , such as Indonesia in ¨The Year of Living Dangerously¨(1982) by Peter Weir with Mel Gibson , Sigourney Weaver, Linda Hunt ; Salvador in ¨Salvador¨ by Oliver Stone with James Woods and James Belushi, and Libano in ¨Deadline¨ by Nathaliel Gutman with Christopher Walken and Hywel Bennett.

The Year of Fury is a production by the Spanish companies Gona and Aliwood Mediterráneo Producciones, in co-production with Cimarrón (Uruguay). It had the support of the Ibermedia program, the ICAA and RTVE. The motion picture was professionally directed by Rafa Russo. Filmmaker Russo has once again tackled a political topic, but this time he relies on the characters who become involved into complex relations. He only has one previous feature film as a director, Amor en autodefensa , although he has directed several short films and written the scripts for telefilms. From the likes of Concepción Arenal (2012) and Clara Campoamor, the Forgotten Woman (2010). Rating: 5.5/10. Acceptable and passable but some boring and tiring.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Neither nourishes nor entertains
victorcanalejo30 May 2021
The first thing to keep in mind is that it is not an original script, but rather a script adapted from Gualberto Baña's novel, "El Ordenamiento del Orden", published by Debate in 2001. Although it has been made a great effort in trying to turn a complex novel, which was closer to Onetti, into a product more accessible to the general public, along the way, a great depth charge has been lost, and none of the goals that the film seems to pursue have been achieved. Neither nourishes nor entertains. And they are probably these, the two problems that the film suffers from on almost all its fronts, that it stays in the middle of nowhere -the following, composition, and structure of its plot lines do not defend an integrating plan-, and that the Dramatic construction is so shallow and predictable that it doesn't entertain. And inevitably this affects the construction of the characters, giving rise to the painful spectacle of contemplating very great actors (the best of the film), struggling to contribute all that the script lacks, depth. And the same happens with the also remarkable work of photography and music. In short, narratively closer to the soap opera than to any other genre.
3 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Masterfully written and directed! Crude and compelling
nataliabilbao8 November 2021
Captivating from the start. This film shows the crude reality of the moments leading to the coup in Uruguay in 1972 without any sugarcoating. The performances are outstanding, the pace of the movie keeps your eyes glued to the screen and all the characters offer a very interesting and well developed point of view. A must see.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Excellent film
liakoskapa6 March 2024
Warning: Spoilers
The movie was really good. It illustrates successfully the fear and the oppression of the Junta in Uruguay during 1973. These tactics, oppression, violence, torture, kidnapping, were very common in the US-made by force Juntas of that Era, in countries like Greece, Chile, Argentina, but also long-term Juntas like Spanish and Portuguese. Many people were killed, some are still missing, many people were tortured and traumatized forever, many women got raped from the Torturers policemen and the army. The movie reminds us that we should never forget. We should always remember how the right-wing ideology led to this political situation. Every country has its own history, but especially during that period, there were many similarities in politics of these countries. Right-wing fascists led to very tough Dictatorships. A strong political movie, a monument of memory.

From a technical point of view, excellent perspective with the camera, very good photographie and acting.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed