Murky swimming pools, bored adolescents, oblivion drinking and signs of the apocalypse are just some of the issues plaguing two chaotic Argentinean families in La Ciénaga, Lucrecia Martel’s feature debut from 2001. Thanks to a new hi-def pressing from Criterion, Martel’s miraculous domestic capture is available to a younger generation of cineastes who likely missed out the first time around, as well as those – like this reviewer – who saw the film years ago but had its brilliance fade into memory’s mist. La Ciénaga may have ushered in a brave new millennium, but its revelation of life’s quirks and caprices remains true and timeless.
One could make a case the Martel drew inspiration for her first feature from two impeccable sources: Anton Chekov and Eric Rohmer. Like Chekov, La Ciénaga is a story of manners and class struggle set in a rambling country estate and, a la Rohmer,...
One could make a case the Martel drew inspiration for her first feature from two impeccable sources: Anton Chekov and Eric Rohmer. Like Chekov, La Ciénaga is a story of manners and class struggle set in a rambling country estate and, a la Rohmer,...
- 2/3/2015
- by David Anderson
- IONCINEMA.com
Blu-ray & DVD Release Date: Jan. 25, 2014
Price: DVD $29.95, Blu-ray $39.95
Studio: Criterion
The release of Lucrecia Martel’s 2008 drama La ciénaga heralded the arrival of an astonishingly vital and original voice in Argentine cinema.
With a radical take on narrative, disturbing yet beautiful cinematography, and a highly sophisticated use of on- and offscreen sound, Martel turns her tale of a decaying bourgeois clan, whiling away the hours of one sweaty, sticky summer, into a cinematic marvel. This visceral take on class, nature, sexuality, and the ways political turmoil and social stagnation can manifest in human relationships is a drama of amazing tactility and one of the great contemporary film debuts.
Criterion’s director-approved special edition Blu-ray and DVD releases contain the following:
• New 4K digital film transfer, approved by director Lucrecia Martel, with 2.0 surround DTS-hd Master Audio soundtrack on the Blu-ray
• New interview with filmmaker Andrés di Tella about Martel and the...
Price: DVD $29.95, Blu-ray $39.95
Studio: Criterion
The release of Lucrecia Martel’s 2008 drama La ciénaga heralded the arrival of an astonishingly vital and original voice in Argentine cinema.
With a radical take on narrative, disturbing yet beautiful cinematography, and a highly sophisticated use of on- and offscreen sound, Martel turns her tale of a decaying bourgeois clan, whiling away the hours of one sweaty, sticky summer, into a cinematic marvel. This visceral take on class, nature, sexuality, and the ways political turmoil and social stagnation can manifest in human relationships is a drama of amazing tactility and one of the great contemporary film debuts.
Criterion’s director-approved special edition Blu-ray and DVD releases contain the following:
• New 4K digital film transfer, approved by director Lucrecia Martel, with 2.0 surround DTS-hd Master Audio soundtrack on the Blu-ray
• New interview with filmmaker Andrés di Tella about Martel and the...
- 10/17/2014
- by Laurence
- Disc Dish
Mar Del Plata International Film Festival's new market component, Inter-Cine, was organized by the same organizers of the market component of the Buenos Aires Independent Film Festival (BAFICI) for the first time this year. Invited guests included FilmFinders (US), Kinoaero (Czech Republic), Art Films (Brazil), Babilla Cine (Colombia), GP Film (Russia), Les filmes de la Arcadia (Chile) and Epicentre Films (France) for one-on-one discussions of future projects with Iberoamerican producers. Kathryn Bigelow, Tommy Lee Jones and Edward James Olmos were among the international guests to the festival itself. The festival itself favored the Japanese in its awards to Hirokazu Kore-eda for 'Still Walking' which won the Golden Astor prize and to Kiyoshi Kurosawa who won best director for 'Tokyo Sonata'. The jury headed by actress/director Sarah Polley (Canada), with director Peter Lilienthal (Germany), film-maker Pedro Olea (Spain), DoP Yu Lik Wai (Hong Kong), director Israel Adrian Caetano (Uruguay) and local film critic David Oubina awarded its Special Prize to 'Involuntary', by Ruben Ostlund (Sweden). The Danish film 'Fear Me Not' received two prizes: best screenplay (Kristian Levring and Anders Thomas Jensen) and best actor (Ulrich Thomsen). Isabelle Huppert was named best actress for Ursula Meier's 'Home'. Mexican Amat Escalante's 'Los Bastardos' won the Latin American competition, while 'Parador Retiro', by Jorge Leandro Colas, and 'Diletante', by Kris Niklison, shared the main prize in the Argentinian competition. Liliana Mazure, president of the national film institute (INCAA), announced at Mar del Plata that Argentina's government raised the maximum amount of film subsidies to $ 1.05m from $ 0.75m per production. 388 features and shorts showed over 11 days. New works by Takeshi Kitano, Olivier Assayas, Terence Davies, Agnes Varda, Abel Ferrara, Jia Zhang-ke, Manoel de Oliveira, Werner Schroeter, Nuri Bilge Ceylan and Jerzy Skolimowski were the most interesting.
- 11/18/2008
- Sydney's Buzz
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