Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Juan José Campanella. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Juan José Campanella. Mostrar todas las entradas

2.5.10

"El secreto de sus ojos" superó el millón de dólares en los Estados Unidos


From IndieWire

Also in its third weekend, Argentine director Juan José Campanella’s Oscar winner “The Secret In Their Eyes” continued to do great business, and topped the $1 million mark in the process. The Sony Pictures Classics release went from 33 to 45 screens this weekend and grossed $365,286, averaging $8,117 and topping out at $1,093,196. The film is tracking well ahead of the films it beat out for the best foreign language film Oscar - fellow SPC releases “The White Ribbon” and “A Prophet” - and is looking to become a considerable foreign language import success story.

29.4.10

Juan Jose Campanella to direct 'Heck' film adaptation (The Hollywood Reporter)


Juan Jose Campanella, whose Argentinean film "The Secret in Their Eyes" won the foreign-language film Oscar this year, is making his English-language feature directing debut by tackling "Heck," an adaptation of a children's fantasy novel for Spyglass Entertainment.

"Heck," described as a kids' version of Dante's "Inferno," centers on a good boy named Milton Fauster who, with his shoplifting sister, dies in a freak accident and ends up in an unearthly reform school called Heck, where Lizzie Borden teaches home economics and Richard Nixon is the ethics teacher. Milton meets Virgil, a boy who has a map of the Nine Circles of Heck, and the two plot to escape the netherworld and its leader, the principal of darkness Bea "Elsa" Bubb.

The project will adapt the first book of the series, "Heck: Where the Bad Kids Go," written by Dale E. Basye and illustrated by Bob Dob. A second book, "Rapacia: The Second Circle of Heck," was published last year, and a third book, "Blimpo: The Third Circle of Heck," will be released next month.

Spyglass' Roger Birnbaum, Gary Barber and Jonathan Glickman are producing. Cassidy Lange, the company's vp production, brought in the project and will oversee.

Spyglass, which is looking at "Heck" as a big, effects-driven family adventure in the vein of "Beetlejuice," is zeroing on a writer to adapt the book; Campanella will supervise the writing.

Campanella has been working in the U.S. on the TV side of the business on and off for more than a decade. Repped by CAA, Protocol Entertainment and Stone Meyer Genow, he most recently directed episodes of Fox's "House" and NBC's "Law & Order: SVU."

Spyglass is in production on "The Tourist," a thriller starring Angelina Jolie and Johnny Depp that the company is producing with GK Films. Spyglass also co-financed the upcoming comedies "Get Him to the Greek" and "Dinner for Schmucks" and is co-financing Ivan Reitman's untitled Paramount comedy.


25.4.10

"El secreto de sus ojos", un éxito en los Estados Unidos


Según las estimaciones de taquilla del segundo fin de semana de "El secreto de sus ojos" en los Estados Unidos, el filme recaudó allí 372 mil dólares entre viernes y domingo en 33 salas. En su primer fin de semana había llevado 168 mil espectadores en diez salas. Si bien el promedio por sala bajó un poco (de 16.800 a 11.200, algo que pasa siempre cuando las películas se expanden a más salas), la película ya superó los 605 mil dólares en sólo diez días.

No sólo eso: pasó del puesto 30 al puesto 17 y subió un 121% su taquilla respecto al fin de semana anterior. Es el segundo mejor promedio por sala en todos los Estados Unidos (sólo por debajo de "Exit Through the Gift Shop", el documental del artista de grafitti Banksy, que se ve sólo en once salas) y es también la segunda película que más creció en taquilla respecto a la semana pasada (la primera es "The City of Your Final Destination" porque, claro, pasó de una pantalla a once).

No hay duda que pronto superará la barrera del millón de dólares y habrá que ver cómo se sostiene con las siguientes semanas a partir del excelente "boca a boca" que está teniendo en los Estados Unidos, tanto como lo tuvo en todos los lugares en los que se estrenó.


Este cuadro es el de las calificaciones (entre A y D, de mejor a peor) que los lectores del sitio www.boxofficemojo.com le dan a la película. Lo cual habla de que el futuro comercial de la película es más que promisorio.

24.4.10

"El secreto de sus ojos", de Juan José Campanella (nuevas críticas)


By Joe Morgenstern/Wall Street Journal


An old Olivetti typewriter provides a running joke in "The Secret in Their Eyes," the Argentine drama that won a foreign-language Oscar last month—the machine can't type the letter 'A.' And the letter 'A' makes all the difference in the world when the hero inserts it in the middle of a one-word note, 'temo,' that he has written to himself. Then 'I fear' becomes 'I love you.' These are clever details in a drama that transcends cleverness. This beautiful film, directed with subtlety and grace by Juan José Campanella, really is about moving from fear to love.

The story begins in contemporary Buenos Aires, when Benjamin Espósito, a retired criminal investigator played by Ricardo Darín, decides to revisit a cold case—the brutal murder of a young woman—by writing a novel about it. In doing so he revisits his still-warm case of love for Irene Menéndez Hastings (Soledad Villamil), a Cornell-educated lawyer, now a judge with a husband and children, who was a beautiful young prosecutor when they worked together a quarter of a century ago.

If you were diagramming the script, which the director and Eduardo Sacheri adapted from Mr. Sacheri's novel, you might divide it between these two elements, an unsolved murder and unresolved love. No movie in memory, though, is less schematic. Elements intertwine. Feelings emerge, recede, resurface. Wit and humor—and remnants of hope—sustain lives burdened with regret. The movie is very much a murder mystery, and very much a love story—in fact a pair of stories about obsessive love lived out by two men with ostensibly different attitudes toward the past, and very different outcomes. It's also a meditation on the passage of time and the uses of memory, an argument for never looking back—"You'll have a thousand pasts and no future," the murder victim's husband tells Benjamin (with what turns out to be startling irony)—and, in a romantic vein, an advertisement for acting on love at whatever time of life.

Exceptional movies are often about many things, and that's certainly the case with this one. I can't recall a more dramatic interrogation than the scene in which a suddenly ferocious Irene tries, to Benjamin's astonishment, to break an implacable suspect. Or a more engagingly odd couple than Benjamin and his colleague Sandoval, an investigator with a fondness for wry jokes and booze. Or a more poignant leave-taking, when Irene and Benjamin embrace but don't kiss, and fear trumps love. (All of it is enhanced by Félix Monti's burnished, sometimes brooding cinematography.)

Of the two previous films I've seen starring Ricardo Darín, "Son of the Bride," which was also directed by Mr. Campanella, is out of print on DVD—please, Sony Pictures Classics, reissue it—but "Nine Queens" remains available, and I've discussed it in more detail elsewhere on this page. A formidable actor with commanding star quality, Mr. Darín, who is in his sixties, plays Benjamin in his thirties persuasively—the actor's vitality is more important than his young-age makeup. In the present-day passages he makes the hero an aging sophisticate whose urbane demeanor conceals suppressed but far from extinguished passion. Ms. Villamil's Irene is quick-witted and alluring in the past and present alike. In a film of impeccable performances, three other standouts are Guillermo Francella, who plays Sandoval; Pablo Rago as Morales, the bereaved husband whose love was almost unfathomably pure; and Javier Godino as the prime suspect, Isidoro Gómez, a figure of pure malevolence at a time in the 1970s when Argentina's military dictatorship was bringing evil back into style.

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A cold case and thawing hearts
By Ann Hornaday/Washington Post

Oscar mavens will recognize "The Secret in Their Eyes" as one of the few genuine upsets at this year's ceremony. The Argentine drama wound up winning for Best Foreign Language Film, upending expectations that Jacques Audiard's superb "A Prophet" would take home the award.

Although fans of "A Prophet" aren't likely to change their minds about who got robbed that night, they will no doubt concede that "The Secret in Their Eyes," an elegant romantic thriller adapted from a novel of the same name, is a terrific film. An absorbing story of the unlikely intersection of an unrequited love affair and an unresolved crime, this taut thriller features some bravura cinematic moments and memorable performances from an exceptionally attractive cast of players.

"The Secret in Their Eyes" opens in the present day, when former prosecution investigator Benjamin Esposito (Ricardo Darn), now retired, begins work on a novel about a case that has been haunting him since 1974, when a young woman was brutally raped and killed and the legal system failed to bring her killer to justice. When Benjamin takes a draft of his book to his former boss, Irene (Soledad Villamil), they begin to reminisce about their own relationship, professional and otherwise. Director Juan Jos Campanella smoothly navigates between past and present, and with each expertly timed revelation "The Secret in Their Eyes" begins to take on deeper layers of meaning that span Benjamin's personal feelings of culpability and the corrupt political backdrop of Argentina's notorious "Dirty War."

If the film's climactic twist borders on the luridly outlandish, Campanella deserves credit for staging it with restraint and for assembling a first-rate cast of seasoned actors. (Villamil, who resembles an Argentine Julie Christie, is a particular revelation.) A stunning unbroken take shot in the midst of a soccer match is worth the price of admission, ample reward for filmgoers whose only desire once the lights go down is to be astonished.


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Rick Groen
Toronto's Globe and Mail
The Secret in Their Eyes

Directed by Juan Jose Campanella
Written by Juan Jose Campanella and Eduardo Sacheri
Starring Ricardo Darin and Soledad Villamil

In the opening frames, a one-word note, scrawled by an aging man on a bedside pad in the seconds before sleep overtakes him, reads simply, “Temo” – I fear. What follows is a murder mystery, a romance, a comedy, a political document, and a dissertation on memory and truth, all seamlessly interwoven into a life-long journey that ends with the addition of a single transformative letter. Among the many secrets in The Secret in Their Eyes is how that old man gains the knowledge, and the courage, to elevate himself from “Temo” to “Te Amo” – from the clutches of fear to the balm of love. Such an arduous journey, yet such an effortless film. Both are remarkable; together, they won this year’s Oscar for best foreign picture.

We start in the movie’s present where Esposito, a retired criminal investigator, is struggling to write a novel about “the Morales case” – that is, a fictional representation of an actual tragedy that occurred way back in 1974. Early on, he pays a visit to his former colleagues in the Buenos Aires court system, including a now-prominent judge named Irene, and they banter with the witty cynicism of the professional classes. Yet there’s a palpable sadness clinging to Esposito. It’s not just that he’s divorced and living alone, but something larger, some unresolved emptiness endured over the decades.

The flashback returns us 25 years to the source of that emptiness. Irene, a blueblood educated at Cornell’s law school, has just arrived at the office. As their eyes meet, Esposito feels an instant attraction to her, and she to him, but he’s intimidated by their difference in social status. That’s the frustrated love story, a “what if?” tale of missed opportunities. Enter the murder mystery, which centres on the rape and killing of a young woman, a new bride with a devoted husband. Looking on as his superiors lazily arrest a pair of black migrant workers, then beat a confession out of them, Esposito strenuously objects, obtains the innocents’ release, and pursues the investigation on his own. But to no avail – the case is abandoned. Only he and the grieving husband, Morales, seem to care.

However, a year later, Esposito follows a new lead and tracks down the suspect to a packed soccer stadium – and director Juan Jose Campanella suddenly switches tactics, trading in his lingering close-ups for hand-held action. The chase sequence is heart-pounding, and, for very different reasons, so is the interrogation scene that follows, the one that sees Gomez (Javier Godino), the loosest of cannons, angrily blurt out his guilt. But remember the political backdrop. This is the seventies, the emerging period of the Argentine police state and of “the disappeared.” In such a state, men like Gomez, cruel men with homicidal talents, are useful. Horrifyingly, the government grants him a full executive pardon; he’s put to work.

Throughout these narrative turns, the film oscillates between the past and the present, as the older Esposito, and the audience too, strain to peer through the mists of time for answers that aren’t opaque. What happened to the wicked Gomez? To the long-suffering Morales? For that matter, what happened to Esposito himself, whose quest for justice in an unjust era made him highly vulnerable? This is where the vagaries of memory and truth suffuse the picture. For instance, Irene looks back at that period as she would at a faded photograph: “I don’t recognize myself. Who am I?” Esposito echoes her conclusion: “I was another person.” For them, and by extension for Argentina itself, the Morales case and its political context were a real nightmare that has grown surreal in retrospect.

How, then, to return that history to the realm of truth? Through memory, of course, but memory plays tricks – it’s the novel we’re all continually writing about our past. So, although the movie’s final act provides answers, offers a resolution, the melodramatic twists also raise suspicions that make it difficult to completely suspend our disbelief. Esposito has a similar problem. Yes, history contains hard facts, but he knows that time tends to encrust those facts in a layering of fiction, and, when it does, only this can be said: “Maybe that’s what happened.”

The wonder is that the film balances its many genres, from the thorns of murder to the bloom of romance to the thickets of politics, with such easy grace. Led by Ricardo Darin as truth’s crusader and Soledad Villamil as love’s beacon, the cast all deliver impeccably naturalistic performances, never theatrical and grounded in the sort of casual humour that lightens even the bleakest succession of days.

But naturalism isn’t realism, and that’s precisely the point here. Over a lifetime of chances seized and lost, of lies told and retracted, our eyes harbour secrets that our mind both knows and doesn’t know. To unravel those secrets can be a hero’s quest or a fool’s errand, and Esposito is duly warned: “Forget about it. You’ll have a thousand pasts and no future.” Maybe so, maybe not – after all, infected by the same germ of hope, history’s heroes are close cousins to its fools.

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The Secret in Their Eyes
Imagine a really long, really awesome episode of Law & Order set in Buenos Aires.
By Dana Stevens/Slate

The Secret in Their Eyes (Sony Pictures Classics), the Argentinean movie that won best foreign-language film at this year's Oscars after a brief run in New York last year, opens today in selected cities and will expand to more cities in May. The film's director, Juan José Campanella, has helmed a string of Argentinean hits in addition to multiple episodes of Law & Order, and if you imagine that compact procedural spun out into a thriller spanning 25 years (and set in the elegant streets of Buenos Aires), you'll get the general idea of what this movie feels like. It's a tightly plotted murder mystery that unfolds in leisurely, satisfying detail and manages to cram a whole miniseries' worth of events into its two-hour running time. Based on a novel by Eduardo Sacheri, The Secret in Their Eyes is an old-fashioned movie-movie, the kind that's substantial enough to go out to dinner after and discuss all the way through dessert.

Benjamin Esposito (Ricardo Darin, whose formidable, brooding presence anchors the film) is a recently retired criminal court investigator. Divorced and depressed, he decides to write a novel based on a 25-year-old cold case that's never ceased to haunt him. In 1974, a young married woman was raped and beaten to death in her apartment. The corrupt local police tortured two construction workers into falsely confessing to the crime. In an extended flashback, we see the younger Benjamin interviewing the victim's widower, Morales (Pablo Rago). Together they become convinced that the real killer is Isidoro Gomez (Javier Godino), a drifter from the girl's rural hometown. Benjamin enlists the help of his bumbling alcoholic colleague, Pablo (the wonderful Guillermo Francella) in tracking down the elusive Gomez. But they lack the evidence to convict Gomez, who's such a skilled sociopath that he's eventually recruited by the Buenos Aires police to carry out their extrajudicial dirty work.

Though the film never trumpets its wider ambitions, this crime thriller also functions as a study of institutional corruption and a treatise on the inconsistency of memory. As part of the research for his novel, Benjamin visits Irene (Soledad Villamil), a judge he worked with on the murder case and has secretly been in love with ever since. Their differing versions of what took place, both professionally and romantically, provide the structuring principle of the film. Campanella (who also edited) makes the present-day and flashback scenes seem part of a seamless whole, and the aging of the two main characters is handled more believably than it is in many Hollywood movies with far more to spend on makeup and special effects.

Any film that tells a story this intricate and sweeping is bound to have a few plot holes. A scene in which the investigators track down the perp in a packed soccer stadium provides an excuse for a breathtaking chase sequence, but it makes no logical sense. And one or two moments involving the killer (played with unsettling intensity by Godino, who resembles a young Christian Bale) threaten to cross the line from suspense into out-and-out melodrama. But The Secret in Their Eyes is large enough in scope to transcend these minor flaws. It's a cracking good murder mystery that, by the time the final twist kicks in, transforms into an moving meditation on memory and justice.

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4 stars for 'The Secret in Their Eyes'
Michael Phillips
Chicago Tribune
Movie critic
April 22, 2010


What are the odds that the year's most compelling mystery would end up hanging its hat on the year's richest love story?

From Argentina, "The Secret in Their Eyes" won this year's Academy Award for best foreign language film, besting such formidable titles as "The White Ribbon" and "A Prophet." All three offer lessons in combining pulp and sociology, bringing to life geographically specific and richly detailed worlds on screen. Of the three, though, it's this one — co-written, co-produced, edited and directed by Juan Jose Campanella — that really delivers as entertainment.

Campanella's resume is fascinating: He was born in Buenos Aires, where most of this legal drama takes place, but he has done a lot of American television in what could broadly be defined as workplace procedurals, ranging from "Law & Order" and "House" to "30 Rock." "The Secret in Their Eyes" ranges nearly as widely within its own 129 minutes.

You never quite know where it's going, yet its mixture of tones and colors and melodrama and mature, mellow romance is irresistible.

It takes a while to get the hang of its two-track narrative structure, adapted by Campanella and Eduardo Sacheri from Sacheri's novel. A divorced, 60-ish and recently retired criminal court investigator has undertaken a writing project, a fictionalized version of a 25-year-old rape and murder case never solved. Benjamin Esposito — played by Ricardo Darin — revisits his old haunts to bring the past into some kind of focus. His former colleague (Soledad Villamil), now a judge, has tantalized Esposito since they first met. He remains haunted by this woman, no less than the murder victim's grieving husband (Pablo Rago) is haunted by his own loss.

The movie works for many reasons. Each major character registers, both as written and as acted by this superb cast, and is vivid enough to deserve a film of his or her own. The wry, funny interaction of these midlevel bureaucrats, including Esposito's alcoholic but wily colleague (Guillermo Francella), moves and sounds and feels like life. (At times you might think you're watching two terrific episodes of "Law & Order" back to back, if "Law & Order" were set in Buenos Aires.)

Half the film unfolds in flashback in 1970s Argentina, as Esposito and his intrepid colleagues buck the system and try to solve a murder case rapidly growing cold. When they do catch up with their prime suspect, the scene's a fantastic showpiece: a chase all over a packed soccer stadium, seamlessly connecting several long takes, the most memorable of which follows the suspect onto the field during the match. (A key scene preceding this, one of ugly sexual goading behind closed office doors, is in its explicit way no less arresting.)

The mystery's resolution may remind you of Dennis Lehane's crime and morality tales. The script's exploration of a corrupt judicial system recalls the best of Sidney Lumet's ensemble works. But the love story is what sets "The Secret in Their Eyes" apart. Make no mistake, the film's a bit shameless: The poetic, running-to-say-goodbye-at-the-train-station prologue and its bookend sequence carry a whiff of the romance novel ethos. Yet Darin and Villamil are wonderful together, playing actual, three-dimensional grown-ups. It's a shock to the system, let me tell you.

There's nothing high-minded or consciously elevating about this picture. It's simply the best kind of pulp, done with feeling and smarts and behavioral details usually left out of both crime films and love stories.

4 stars

MPAA rating:
R (for a rape scene, violent images, some graphic nudity and language)
Cast:
Ricardo Darin (Benjamin Esposito); Soledad Villamil (Irene); Pablo Rago (Ricardo); Guillermo Francella (Pablo Sandoval); Javier Godino (Isidoro Gomez)
Credits:
Directed by Juan Jose Campanella; written by Eduardo Sacheri and Campanella, based on Sacheri's novel; produced by Gerardo Herrero, Mariela Besuievsky and Campanella. A Sony Pictures Classics release. Running time: 2:09.

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'Secrets' And Lies Drive An Oscar-Worthy Thriller
by BOB MONDELLO/NPR

At last month's Academy Awards, the biggest upset -- virtually the only upset from an oddsmaker's point of view -- came when Argentina's The Secret in Their Eyes took home the statuette for Best Foreign Language Film.

Most observers had pegged that category as a two-way race between France's Godfather-like crime epic A Prophet and Germany's austere social critique The White Ribbon. Instead, Oscar voters went for a noirish thriller that splits the difference between the two -- a taut murder mystery with a political conscience. That it does so with romance and not a little wit probably helped.

As the opening credits roll, writer-director Juan Jose Campanella shows us a one-time criminal investigator struggling to pen a novel about a crime that's haunted him for decades. In the mid-1970s, Benjamin Esposito (Ricardo Darin) had doggedly pursued a case -- the brutal rape and murder of a bank employee's wife -- despite official efforts to discourage him. He'd become emotionally involved, and empathetic. But the nearer he'd gotten to solving the crime, the stranger and more labyrinthine it had become.

Determined to bring literary closure to a case he'd been unable to close legally, he returns to his old Supreme Court stomping grounds. His stride is halting now, his hair streaked with gray, but his eyes still sparkle when he greets Irene Menendez Hastings (Soledad Villamil), a judge he worked with -- and carried a torch for -- some 25 years earlier.

When she hears that his novel will rehash the Morales case, though, her own eyes cloud. The original investigation had led both of them down dark legal alleyways that became more treacherous the further they ventured: In flashbacks, we learn of trumped-up charges, forced confessions, political interference and a killer still on the loose -- until Ben and a brilliant but alcoholic co-worker (comedian Ricardo Morales) track him one day to a soccer stadium.

The director sends his cameras hurtling after their suspect (a creepily feral Javier Godino) as he burrows deep into the bowels of the stadium -- catching up with him, losing him, leaping over banisters with him, even chasing him onto the field, where thousands of screaming fans boo as he interferes with a goal. It's a pretty visceral chase sequence, as tactile as it is frenetic. It's also, as Ben will explore years later in his novel, just a prelude to a decades-long nightmare that's far less public.

Leaping around in time, Campanella uses the aftermath of this one sadistic murder case to expose not just law-enforcement shortcomings but fault lines in Argentine society. Class distinctions interfere with everything from justice to romance; official pressure to forgive transgressions is countered by stubborn personal quests for justice.

Because the flashbacks take place in an era just before Argentina was brutalized by a military dictatorship -- a time of death squads, seared into the nation's memory -- the quest for justice is doubtless a given for Argentine audiences. And while American viewers don't start with the same reference point, Campanella, who's directed quite a few episodes of Law & Order: SVU, is just the guy to fill us in.

He's hampered somewhat by overheated source material and a final twist that's more than a trifle lurid. Still, there's no shortage of real social anguish for him to play with: official paranoia, government corruption, a political underworld that prizes criminality. The Secret in Their Eyes finds secrets everywhere -- even in what's driving Ben and Irene as they separately examine the decisions they made back in the 1970s. For both of them, as for their country, accurate remembrance of that period is crucial. Neither was an open book, but Ben has now written one, and Irene will insist on some edits.

"El secreto de sus ojos", de Juan José Campanella (crítica de Roger Ebert)


The Secret in Their Eyes
Two stories, 25 years, one murder

Release Date: 2010

Ebert Rating: ****

By Roger Ebert Apr 21, 2010

"The Secret in Their Eyes" opens with the meeting, after many years, of Benjamin (Ricardo Darin) and Irene (Soledad Villamil). She is a judge. He is a retired criminal investigator. They are just a little too happy to see each other. Twenty-five years ago, when she was assistant to a judge and he was an investigator under her, they were involved in a brutal case of rape and murder. Benjamin visited the crime scene, and the dead woman's corpse spoke eloquently of the crime's brutality. Two workmen were arrested and convicted. Benjamin was never convinced of their guilt. Now he tells Irene that on his own time he wants to write about the case.

This commences an absorbing back and forth journey through time, between Buenos Aires in 1974 and 2000, which reopens both the crime and the unacknowledged feeling that has remained all these years between Irene and Benjamin. That's where their personal appeal comes into play. The actress Soledad Villamil is, forgive me, my idea of a woman. Grown-up, tallish, healthy, brunette, sane and perhaps she was cast for her eyes, because the film contains a lot of closeups, and they're required to conceal secrets. Think of Anne Archer. Playing Irene at ages 25 years apart, she is never too young or too old, but standing right there.

Ricardo Darin makes her worthy partner as Benjamin. His rank was too low, his pay too small, her presence too assured for him to trust the signals he must have known she was sending. He's one of those men on whom a beard seems inevitable. There is a sadness about him. He has never stopped thinking about the murder case, and we understand -- although the movie is indirect about this -- that the investigation was mishandled at the time because of Argentina's diseased right-wing politics.

Without being too obvious about it, the film reassembles the strands of two stories, the murder case and the unfinished emotions between Benjamin and Irene. It is filled with vivid characters. Sandoval (Guillermo Francella) is Benjamin's alcoholic assistant in the investigation, one of those drunks who may be incompetent but is not useless. He and Benjamin, and all the legal-side workers, engage in the droll formality of addressing one another by fanciful titles. Morales (Pablo Rago) is the husband of the dead woman, still obsessed with her death. Gomez (Javier Godino) has always been Benjamin's real suspect, and there is a scene involving him in a soccer stadium that I have no idea how it could have been filmed, special effects or not.

Juan Jose Campanella is the writer-director, and here is a man who creates a complete, engrossing, lovingly crafted film. He is filled with his stories. "The Secret in Their Eyes" is a rebuke to formula screenplays. We grow to know the characters, and the story pays due respect to their complexities and needs. There is always the sense that they exist in the
now and not at some point along a predetermined continuum. Sometimes I watch a film unspool like a tape measure, and I can sense how far we are from the end. Sometimes my imagination is led to live right along with it.

"The Secret in Their Eyes" surprised many by winning the 2010 Academy Award for best foreign-language film. Michael Haneke's "The White Ribbon," another considerable film, was thought to be the front-runner. The academy did a good thing when it reformed the foreign-language film voting, requiring all voters to see all five finalists. In 2009, with the Japanese winner "Departures," and again in 2010, the voters had an advantage over the rest of us. Who is to say if they were right? They voted as they felt, and in today's unhappy distribution scene, the Oscar means your chances of seeing this film are much increased. You won't regret it. This is a real movie, the kind they literally don't make very much anymore.

Cast & Credits

Benjamin Ricardo Darin
Irene Soledad Villamil
Sandoval Guillermo Francella
Morales Pablo Rago
Gomez Javier Godino
Baez Jose Luis Gioia
Liliana Carla Quevedo

Sony Pictures Classics presents a film written and directed by Juan Jose Campanella. Based on the novel by Eduardo Sacheri. In Spanish with English subtitles. Running time: 129 minutes. Rated R (for a rape scene, violent images, some graphic nudity and language).

18.4.10

"El secreto de sus ojos" arrancó fuerte en los Estados Unidos


Lo que sigue es de IndieWire, y habla de la muy buena recaudación en diez salas de la película de Juan José Campanella y, de paso, hablando de cosas ligadas a la Argentina, de la película que filmó aquí James Ivory y que también se estreno allí el viernes:

Also opening was “The Secret In Their Eyes,” Juan José Campanella’s film that surprised many by taking the best foreign language film Oscar over “The White Ribbon” and “A Prophet” (oddly enough, all three films are being released through Sony Pictures Classics). “Eyes” grossed $176,389 from its 10 screens, giving it a $17,639 average. That puts the film almost exactly on par with “A Prophet”‘s February debut, where it averaged $18,197 from 9 screens. “A Prophet” just hit $1,805,286 now in its eighth weekend. “Secret” will expand over the next few weeks.

The film that actually scored the highest per-theater-average of the weekend was the single screen debut of James Ivory’s “The City of Your Final Destination.” Starring Anthony Hopkins, Laura Linney and Charlotte Gainsbourg, “City” grossed an impressive $22,000 from its exclusive opening at the Paris in New York. The Screen Media Films-released “City”‘s true fate comes next weekend, when it expands beyond the Paris and into metro NY and LA.

16.4.10

"El secreto de sus ojos", de Juan José Campanella (más críticas)


Lisa Schwarzbaum/Entertainment Weekly

Having just won the Academy Award as the year's best foreign-language film, The Secret in Their Eyeshas a decent shot at wearing down resistance to subtitled films. Don't be put off. This spellbinder from Argentina will sneak up and floor you. It's that good.

Ricardo Darin is brilliant as Benjamin, a criminal-court investigator who is tormented by the unsolved rape and murder of a young bride in 1974, and by the military junta that devastated his country around the same time. We watch as Benjamin and Sandoval (the superb Guillermo Francella), his alcoholic partner, work with the victim's husband, Ricardo (Pablo Rago), to identify the killer. Photos, especially those revealing the eyes of the killer, play a major role in the discovery. In a thunderously exciting chase scene through a Buenos Aires stadium during a heated soccer match, Benjamin and Sandoval hunt their prey, only to find him given shelter by the corrupt government of the new Argentina.

Now, 25 years later, the retired Benjamin begins writing a novel to resolve his need for closure and his feelings for Judge Irene Menéndez Hastings (Soledad Villamil, fiercely good). Out of a fabric of suspense that would have fascinated Alfred Hitchcock, director Juan José Campanella, best known in the U.S. for his work on Law & Order SVU,House and 30 Rock, weaves a moral fable that manages to pack a powerhouse punch and still be as intimate as a whisper. The highest praise is due Darin and Villamil for letting the unspoken passion between these two characters play out in their eyes. You won't be able to take your own eyes off them, or to get this supremely intelligent and deeply touching thriller out of your head.




PETER TRAVERS/Rolling Stone


Lisa Schwarzbaum/Entertainment WeeklyAs if to guarantee that the title doesn't go to waste, the complicated characters in the sinuous Argentinean thriller The Secret in Their Eyes frequently stare at one another in tight close-ups that encourage the audience to study each actor's expressive orbs for clues: What really happened in a Buenos Aires rape and murder case still unresolved after 25 years? What's going on in the head and heart of a recently retired criminal investigator-turned-novelist (Ricardo Darín) who has been hopelessly in love with his upper-class court colleague (Soledad Villamil) for a quarter of a century? Slipping the action between the past and the present, the movie — handsome and conventional enough to win this year's Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film — also snakes its slow-moving way through genres. As written and directed by Juan José Campanella, The Secret in Their Eyes melds the elements of a whodunit, a mature romance, a damning political commentary, and even a serious buddy movie, as the former investigator works side-by-side with his devoted, alcoholic partner (famed Argentinean comic Guillermo Francella).

The performances are tender, the script elegant, the cinematography (especially during a virtuoso chase scene in a soccer stadium) artful. Listen closely, though, and you can almost hear the reassuring chung-CHUNG that marks the influence of the many episodes of Law & Order on the director's résumé. Organized in a vague approximation of a three-episode L&O marathon, scenes regularly fade to black, then pick up elsewhere. All that's missing are title cards with Argentinean addresses to map the progress as secrets are revealed before our eyes. B


"El secreto de sus ojos", de Juan José Campanella (críticas)




Cold Case, Warm Hearts: Death Leads to Romance

The past continually forces its way into the present in “The Secret in Their Eyes,” an attractive, messy drama riddled with violence and edged with comedy that comes with a hint of Grand Guignol, a suggestion of politics and three resonant, deeply appealing performances. Set primarily in contemporary Argentina with intermittent flashbacks to the 1970s when the country was descending into a military dictatorship, the film is by turns a whodunit (and why), a romance and something of a ghost story. A young dead woman lies at the center of the mystery, but she’s scarcely the only thing here haunting the living.

If it takes a while to get a handle on the identity of the dead woman, it’s because she’s initially conjured up in the imagination of Benjamin (Ricardo Darín), a former court investigator. Now retired, Benjamin first encountered the woman years earlier at her home, where her naked body, as is too often true of movie corpses, was decoratively arranged on her death bed. The culprit, at least when it comes to aestheticizing this particular horror, is the writer and director Juan José Campanella, who has a tendency to gild every lily, even a dead one. That inclination explains some of the film’s sudden shifts in mood and outlandish plot twists, both of which can be preposterous but also create tension, surprise and a sense of disquiet that borders on dread.

Benjamin, having decided to write about the dead woman, revisits her murder, a pursuit that leads from the typed page into the offices of a judge and former colleague, Irene (Soledad Villamil). A quarter-century ago, Irene was his much younger supervisor, toiling with him in a warren of book-lined, paper-strewn rooms alongside a boozing, desperate clown, Sandoval (Guillermo Francella). Together the three tried to navigate around a bigger boss, a jaundiced judge, and through a system where the poor were railroaded for crimes they didn’t commit so they could serve the needs of the powerful. One such crime involves the dead woman.

At first, the murdered woman — or rather how Benjamin’s inquiry into her death affects him — brings to mind Otto Preminger’s “Laura.” In that 1944 noir, Dana Andrews plays a detective who, while investigating what he believes is the murder of the title character (Gene Tierney, a natural stiff), falls in love with the victim, or rather her portrait. Benjamin doesn’t fall in love with his dead woman, though the way he looks at her corpse and then her photographs suggests more than he can admit. But this long-gone woman seems to exert a hold on him, possessing him while he pecks out another page, as the camera crawls through the shadows and Mr. Campanella pokes into the past.

Mr. Campanella’s eclectic résumé includes several films made in his native country (“Son of the Bride,” a comedy) and numerous directing gigs for American television shows, including the “Law & Order” franchise. Although he executes some flashy moves in “The Secret in Their Eyes,” routinely calling attention to the camera — as in an aerial shot of a stadium in which the camera appears to descend seamlessly into the roaring crowd before chasing after a single character — it’s the performances that stick with you, along with Sandoval’s booze-soaked melancholia, an occasional scripted eccentricity and the chaos of the increasingly impotent justice system. The scenes between Mr. Darín and Ms. Villamil aren’t subtle (their eyes aren’t especially secretive), but they appealingly convey the warmth of habit and heat of regret.

The intimacy between Benjamin and Irene is lightly handled, as are several comic scenes — including a funny exchange during which Benjamin and Salvador’s amateur sleuthing comes under mocking attack — which show Mr. Campanella at his most nimble. (That adroitness helped the film win this year’s Academy Award for best foreign-language picture.) Less persuasive is his use of the military dictatorship, which takes on ugly human form primarily in the characters of a violent criminal and a bureaucrat who facilitates his brutality. The scenes with these thugs are blunt and effective: the creep-out factor is high. But they also frame the dictatorship in terms of individual pathologies, with little evident politics to make anyone feel uncomfortable as the memories of murder are inevitably turned into smiles.

“The Secret in Their Eyes” is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Rape, murder and other brutalities.

Movie review: ‘The Secret in Their Eyes’/LOS ANGELES TIMES

The unsolved murder of a young woman is the root of this haunting, beautifully calibrated Oscar winner from Argentina.

By Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times Film Critic

April 16, 2010

There's something about a haunting mystery being solved by a haunted mind that's particularly seductive. That's just one of the many pleasures of "The Secret in Their Eyes," whose string of knots challenges and charms in a way that make its win of the foreign-language Oscar this year perfectly understandable.

Argentine writer-director Juan José Campanella has given audiences a beautifully calibrated movie in the most traditional sense of the word — the ideal marriage of topic, talent and tone. It's anchored by the unsolved murder of a young wife that won't let former criminal investigator Ben Espósito (Ricardo Darín) rest easy even after 25 years.

In addition to being one of Argentina's best-known filmmakers, Campanella has earned Emmys here, plus attention for directing episodes of "House," "Law & Order Special Victims Unit" and "30 Rock." He brought all that case-solving and comedy experience to bear in adapting the Eduardo Sacheri novel, interweaving the parallel worlds of the personal and the professional as his central character comes to realize that there is much more in his life to resolve than this single case.

The story begins in Buenos Aires in the '70s with the brutal rape and murder of the 23-year-old wife of Ricardo Morales (Pablo Rago), an ordinary young man with an extraordinary love for his wife and the life they were beginning to build. All these years later, Espósito sets about turning the case into a novel in an effort to answer all that remains unanswered.

As the puzzle of the past unfolds in flashbacks, the present reconnects him with his own lost love, Irene (Soledad Villamil), who was his young boss on the case and is now a respected judge with a family; he is just older and alone. But the spark remains, and Campanella strings a tight wire of crackling dialogue between them packed with all the tension and tease of a couple dancing around the edges of a relationship.

The filmmaker is careful not to overuse their substantial chemistry, sprinkling it through the film like a hot spice as Espósito tries to figure out what clues he overlooked years ago. Another key player in this well-cast ensemble is Espósito's partner Sandoval, a sometimes-brilliant investigator forever sidetracked by his love of booze, played with an amusing blend of ironic pathos by famed Argentine comic Guillermo Francella.

Campanella has been clever in using the blueprint of a cold-case procedural to explore a range of emotional themes from love and obsession to justice and retribution, all cast against a dark time of secret police and political intrigues in his native land. The action is moved along as much by patterns of human behavior as by events, and in doing so the filmmaker has given texture and depth to what could otherwise have become a more conventional thriller.

While Espósito sorts through his second thoughts and reconsiderations of decisions he and others made so long ago, director of photography Félix Monti and the production team work to both connect and separate the eras by keeping much of the focus on the faces and, of course, the eyes. When the camera pulls back to let more in, tension usually comes with it, as when Espósito spots the husband in a train station and learns that he spends his days moving from one station to another, hoping to spot the killer who's never been caught.

Darín is captivating as Espósito, and despite the years etched on the actor's face, he still brings his scenes as a much younger Espósito to life. He is the spine of the film, and it is the strength of the connection he builds with each character in turn — the lost love, the drunken partner, the destroyed husband, the killer — that ultimately makes the film a timepiece of precision and artistry. Like the murder at the heart of this tale, "Secret" is bound to linger in the memory for years.

betsy.sharkey@latimes.com




14.4.10

Crítica: "El secreto de sus ojos", de Juan José Campanella (The New Yorker)


By David Denby

In Buenos Aires in 1974, a criminal-court investigator, Benjamin Espósito (Ricardo Darín), arrives at a crime scene bantering and cursing with a colleague, and sees the naked corpse of a beautiful young woman. A conventional Argentine male with a passionate reverence for female splendor, he’s stunned into silence; he appears to take the woman’s violation (she has been raped, beaten, and murdered) as an affront to his personal sense of order. Not only does he relentlessly pursue the killer; he draws close to the woman’s husband, a bank employee named Morales (Pablo Rago), who remains obsessed with his dead wife for the rest of his life. “The Secret in Their Eyes,” which won the Oscar this year for best foreign-language film, is, I suppose, a legal thriller, but it’s powerfully and richly imagined: a genre-busting movie that successfully combines the utmost in romanticism with the utmost in realism—Espósito, it turns out, has a love of his own, which he’s too abashed to act on. A few scenes approach the melodramatic kitsch of a telenovela, but the writer-director, Juan José Campanella, working with the screenwriter and novelist Eduardo Sacheri, sends us deeper into mystery and passion; the movie presses forward with a rhapsodic urgency and with flashes of violence and pungent humor. “The Secret in Their Eyes” is a finely wrought, labyrinthine entertainment whose corners and passageways will be discussed by moviegoers for hours afterward as they exit into the cool night air.

The movie opens in 2000, and Espósito, gray-bearded, is at his desk, writing. It is twenty-five years after the murder, and the investigator, retired yet still fascinated by the case, is assembling his recollections of it. What he writes is played out by the actors, but he angrily throws away each recollection as an inadequate first draft, and that scene disappears from the screen. Campanella is seriously teasing us: Espósito may be dissatisfied with his prose, but what he depicts in these first-draft attempts actually happened (we see the scenes again later, in their proper place in the story). Back in 1974, Espósito chases the killer with the aid of his antic partner, Pablo Sandoval (Guillermo Francella), and their cautious superior, Irene Menéndez Hastings (Soledad Villamil), a judge’s assistant. (In Argentina, judges act like D.A.s, investigating cases and indicting suspects.) Educated in the United States, Irene (as she’s referred to throughout) is a tall, brilliant upper-class beauty with a big head of black hair—think of a young South American Susan Sontag. She’s clearly on her way to the top (by 2000, she’s a powerful judge). Espósito is an intelligent man with penetrating dark eyes, but he’s not a lawyer, and the difference between them in income and status stops him from openly declaring his love for her, which she keeps hinting that she wants. Instead, he worries about Sandoval, an alcoholic genius who rises from the depths of a midday stupor in a bar and pulls together the clues that lead to the identity and the arrest of the murderer. Sandoval is a lovable mess, who, despite his gifts, can’t survive amid the chaos and the repression of Buenos Aires. The movie is haunted by missed opportunities and the meaningless, unhappy passage of time—the underside of obsession.

The murderer is a furtive creep named Gomez (Javier Godino), and what follows his capture is altogether startling. When Espósito, interrogating him, doesn’t get anywhere, Irene takes over. She turns the questioning into a sexual duel, taunting Gomez’s manhood, her words more wounding and more effective than a beating with brass knuckles. Campanella, who works in both the United States and Argentina, has directed numerous episodes of “Law & Order,” but what happens in this scene is not something you’ll see on American television. Irene understands the loathing of women at the heart of Argentine machismo; she plays a sarcastic bitch in order to provoke Gomez’s rage, and enjoys a triumph that pushes feminism beyond a critique of men—beyond ironic mockery, too—into a kind of legal-world performance art.

From scene to scene, the movie has an enormously vital swing to it. Espósito is a knight-errant of the law who seeks justice, and Sandoval is his Sancho Panza, while the judges (apart from Irene) are profane and corrupt political hacks; the back-and-forth among the court workers is juicy and explicit, sometimes hilarious, sometimes sinister, while the atmosphere outside the courts is savage. The dictator Juan Perón dies in 1974, and is succeeded by his wife, Isabel; it’s the time of the death squads, the disappearances, and legal anarchy. Gomez is freed by one of the judges and becomes a bully boy for the new fascist regime. He’s a serious threat to Espósito (Irene is protected by her wealthy family), and a provocation to Morales, the dead woman’s husband. Years go by, and, for most Argentineans, the time between the rule of the Peróns and the rise of democracy may be lost in a way that goes deeper than the lost love of two colleagues. Yet Campanella does no more than hint at the anguished political background of the story; he mostly sticks to his principal players, who are woven together in an increasingly intricate structure, revealed by an inventive and flexible camera. Campanella moves in for prolonged, emotionally wrenching closeups, as in a Garbo drama from the nineteen-thirties. He also does fluent and muscular sweeps: when Espósito and Sandoval first discover Gomez, in a soccer stadium, the camera, exploding with animal energy, pursues him, loses him as he ducks down a ramp, picks him up again. There may be no “signature” shot here, as in the work of an established auteur, but there’s an effortless mastery, from moment to moment, of whatever the dramatic situation requires



11.4.10

Argentina’s ‘Secret’ is out Friday (The Boston Globe)


By Loren King, Globe Correspondent | April 11, 2010

The smart money in the office Oscar pool this year was on Michael Haneke’s “The White Ribbon’’ to win best foreign language film, with some oddsmakers giving the edge to Jacques Audiard’s “A Prophet.’’ After all, Haneke’s austere World War I drama took the Palme d’Or at Cannes and the foreign language Golden Globe, and Audiard’s gangster film earned not just the Grand Prix at Cannes but comparisons to Brian De Palma’s 1983 cult fave, “Scarface.’’

But the Academy Award winner turned out to be an unheralded noir thriller from Argentina, Juan José Campanella’s “El secreto de sus ojos’’ — “The Secret in Their Eyes’’ — which opens Friday in the Boston area. And if the upset surprised Oscar viewers, it also caught Campanella off guard. He’d been through it before, with 2001’s “El hijo de la novia (“Son of the Bride’’), which lost the foreign film honors to “No Man’s Land.’’ But that low-key experience, he says, “was not at all like this.’’

Even before its unexpected Oscar win, “The Secret in Their Eyes’’ had already become Argentina’s second-highest-grossing film of all time, surpassed only by Leonardo Favio’s 1975 classic, “Nazareno Cruz y el lobo’’ (“Nazareno Cruz and the Wolf’’). That’s pretty impressive for a gritty noir/adult romance spanning 25 years and partially set in 1974 Buenos Aires, just before the arrival of the military junta. It’s a period some in the South American country might prefer to forget, but that others are beginning to grapple with. No surprise, then, that “The Secret in Their Eyes’’ examines, with subtlety, the power of individual and collective memory.

Argentina has the distinction of being the only country in Latin America to have won an Oscar; its first win came in 1986 for Luis Puenzo’s “The Official Story,’’ another film that tackled the personal costs of Argentina’s turbulent past under military dictatorship.

Campanella says his movie probably benefited from the Academy Awards rule that requires voters in the foreign film category to see all five nominees. “When this film is seen at screenings, buzz happens,’’ says the director in a telephone interview from Los Angeles. With a casual humor that pops up in his conversation as well as throughout his otherwise dark film, he adds, “Some members of my family are even talking to me again.’’

Although he still lives in his native Buenos Aires, Campanella is no stranger to Hollywood. Between films, he earns a living in American television, helming episodes of “House,’’ “Law & Order’’ and even “30 Rock.’’ Now he hopes the buzz of that Oscar upset translates to getting subtitle-shy American audiences to actually see his movie.

Based on a novel by Eduardo Sacheri, “The Secret in Their Eyes’’ is about an investigator named Benjamin Esposito (played by Ricardo Darin, Campanella’s frequent leading man and a huge star in Argentina), who has been beaten down by bureaucracy. As the film opens in 1999, Esposito continues to be haunted by the unsolved 1974 rape and murder of a young woman. Campanella, who also edited the film, fluidly jumps between 1999 and 1974, when the investigator first meets court judge Irene Menendez Hastings (Soledad Villamil), a cosmopolitan beauty with a degree from Cornell. Esposito’s secret love for her spans two decades and is a source of underlying tension throughout the film. With his alcoholic colleague and best friend Pablo (comic actor Guillermo Francella), Esposito investigates the brutal crime and comes up against judicial and political corruption. The case torments him for the next 25 years along with his inability to act on his own passions.

The film’s depiction of street-level police work and a swooping-camera chase scene through a soccer stadium may have been influenced by Campanella’s work on “Law & Order.’’ But “The Secret in Their Eyes’’ is also a throwback to American movies of the ’70s and early ’80s. After he saw Bob Fosse’s “All That Jazz’’ in 1980, Campanella says he quit his engineering studies in Buenos Aires and enrolled in film school there. Two years later, he was studying film at New York University.

“The great thing about New York at that time was that I saw hundreds of movies on the big screen. It’s where I discovered Italian comedy,’’ he says, citing Ettore Scola’s 1974 film “We All Loved Each Other So Much’’ as particularly influential. He describes “The Secret in Their Eyes’’ as a political thriller on the order of “Three Days of the Condor,’’ “The Parallax View,’’ and “The Conversation,’’ but with Italian characters.

“They are bumbling, they are failing,’’ he says. “Esposito is a coward; he doesn’t speak to the woman he loves and he carries that burden for 25 years.’’

It was while making his first feature in Argentina, “Same Love, Same Rain’’ (1999), that Campanella met his wife, Cecilia Monti, a costume designer. She’s designed the wardrobe for all his subsequent movies as well as for Francis Ford Coppola’s recent “Tetro.’’ They have a 3-year-old son, and Campanella is considering an animated feature for his next project because it would be “palette cleansing,’’ he says, to direct a film for children. But he has no firm plans.

“Right now, I’m a man who has just had a hearty breakfast,’’ he says, joking about his reliance on food metaphors. “I can’t even think about lunch.’’

Juan Jose Campanella clues you in to 'The Secret in Their Eyes' (Los Angeles Times)


By Mark Olsen

When Argentine filmmaker Juan José Campanella was handed the Oscar for foreign-language film last month, there was something oddly appropriate that the presenters were Pedro Almodóvar and Quentin Tarantino. Campanella's film, "The Secret in Their Eyes," which opens Friday in New York and Los Angeles, exists at the intersection of the character-driven art film and the plot-driven genre film.

The story of "Secret" finds a retired cop (Ricardo Darín) attempting to piece together a brutal rape and murder that he never solved while also taking small romantic steps with a woman he has long loved and never won.

With its story line of mystery and romance and its flashbacks to the case's initial investigation, the film also functions as an allegory of how Argentina continues to grapple with its own past, haunted by the specter of repressive dictatorship.

"The balance we were trying to strike, a lot of it is intuition," Campanella said recently in Los Angeles. "But it's the balance between the crime story and the love story, not the political reason. The political is a backdrop, a context. I always compared it to World War II in 'Casablanca.' It's happening, and it emerges in personal ways, in attitudes. But you would not describe 'Casablanca' as a war movie."

The film is adapted from a novel by Eduardo Sacheri. Campanella first read the book strictly for his own pleasure without thinking of adapting it into a movie. Eventually, his passion for the story would lead him to collaborate with Sacheri on a screenplay.

"There were images that kept coming back to me," said Campanella, "especially the old man who feels alone, who wants to find where he went wrong. To me, that's the motivation of the whole story. It's not about a guy obsessed with the case for professional reasons, or to find $10 million buried somewhere, it's a completely internal reason. And that to me was a different kind of mystery."

Campanella, 50, studied at New York University film school, and one of his previous films, 2001's "Son of the Bride," was also nominated for the foreign-language Oscar. Campanella has since directed episodes of American television shows such as "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit," "House" and "30 Rock."

Perhaps from his time in television, there is a startling efficiency and economy to Campanella's storytelling, and he and Sacheri were careful to seed the surprising twist ending in "Secret" throughout the script.

"The good ending is unpredictable yet unavoidable," said Campanella. "You have to know enough that you don't see it coming, but when it does happen you say, 'Of course.' Everybody likes to play detective."

15.3.10

La hora de la boludez

Me llega esto por email y en este cuerpo y color:

LA VERDAD DE LA CEREMONIA DEL OSCAR Y DE LAS INVITACIONES CONTADA
POR LA PERSONA ENCARGADA DEL TEMA EN
MICROESPECTACULOS
POR RADIO UNIVERSIDAD DE BELGRANO

Me pregunto: ¿no tenés nada mejor para hacer en la vida?

14.3.10

Radio Micropsia - Episodio 17



Por Radio Nacional (FM 93.7), domingos de 20 a 22hs.
O por internet, entrando por aquí.

Tarde, pero seguro, nuestro análisis de los Oscars. Además, DJ invitado: Hynek Pallas (Suecia) y un compilado musical que seguramente le encantará a los votantes de la Academia... La otra Academia, digo.

13.3.10

Encampanellizado...

Perdón por no actualizar demasiado el blog ultimamente. Desde el domingo pasado que el diario requiere un 100% full time de dedicación, básicamente por el Oscar a "El secreto de sus ojos" que se suma, claro, al laburo habitual y a que todos mis colaboradores habituales del área cine no tuvieron mejor idea que tomarse vacaciones estas semanas.

Desde acá, igual, aprovecho para agradecer a Diego Papic (me siento como en los Oscars!!) sin cuya invaluable (bah, valuable es, alguien tendrá que pagarle!) colaboración, nunca hubiéramos podido sacar todo ese embrollo adelante.

Y todavía falta lo mejor... (o lo peor, que se yo) aguántense hasta el diario de mañana!!!

Argentina's got an Oscar "Secret" (Los Angeles Times)


Grande Piñeyro ahi (lean abajo)


The film's success could unlock a new era for that country's movie industry.

By Patrick J. McDonnell reporting from buenos aires


March 13, 2010

It was well past midnight here, but spontaneous celebration broke out last week when word came from Hollywood that Argentina's Oscar entry, "The Secret in Their Eyes," had snared the award for best foreign language film of 2009."It was like Argentina had scored a goal or won a match at the World Cup," recalled an ecstatic Soledad Villamil, the lead actress in the film.


"Secret," a $3-million co-production with Spain, is part murder mystery, part political thriller and part love story and Argentina's most popular domestic film in three decades. About 2.5 million moviegoers here have paid to see it since it opened in August -- a dazzling accomplishment in a nation where one-quarter of that number is considered a major success and where cheap pirated DVDs are ubiquitous. After its Oscar triumph, the film went into 50 additional theaters here. It's also a hit in Spain and is scheduled to open April 16 in Los Angeles and New York with a national rollout to follow.


"We're very confident people in the U.S. will respond to it," director Juan José Campanella said by telephone from the United States, where he remained after the Oscar ceremony.


But the larger question here is whether the film's broad appeal could help alter viewing habits in a nation where Hollywood blockbusters dominate multiplexes and many moviegoers proudly proclaim, "I don't see Argentine films." The declaration is generally taken as a stance against the very personal and even obscure nature of some contemporary Argentine movies, art-house hits that do well on the international festival circuit but don't resonate with a broad public. "Secret" has shattered that pattern." 'Secret' is not a cult film, it's not a film for specialists," said Vanessa Ragone, an executive of Haddock Films, one of the Argentine co-producers.


Many saw the Oscar -- Argentina's first since 1986, when "The Official Story" won the foreign language statuette -- as an affirmation of the flowering of film talent here in the past 10 to 15 years that is broadly labeled the New Argentine Cinema. The movement encompasses a wide spectrum of cinematic vision and defies generalization."We want investors to know that, as 'Secret' shows, Argentine film can be good business," said Liliana Mazure, president of the National Institute of Film and Audiovisual Arts, a government agency that promotes cinema and helped bankroll the film.Argentina's film history dates back more than a century, and the industry was once among the giants of Latin America. But the cinema has been vulnerable to blow-back from the country's recurrent economic and political crises.


The Argentine film renaissance of the last decade has yielded some remarkable movies and an ongoing argument about what the country's taxpayer-subsidized film industry should be about -- artsy gems viewed by few or movies that strive for a broader audience."A challenge of 'Secret' is whether we will see more Argentine films that try to appeal to a wide range of viewers," said Pablo Sirven, a cultural editor at La Nacion, a leading daily here."Secret" is based on a novel by Eduardo Sacheri, best known here previously for short stories about soccer, a national obsession. The film diverges considerably from the novel, but soccer plays a pivotal role in a gripping manhunt that is central to the plot.


Campanella, 50, one of Argentina's best-known directors, is distinguished among his counterparts here because of his commercial success and U.S. directing stints on television series like "House," "Law & Order" and "30 Rock." He was an electronic engineering student in 1980 when he saw Frank Capra's classic " It's a Wonderful Life," an experience that, he said, literally changed his life, turning his career toward the cinema and New York University's film school. He calls taut 1970s Hollywood classics like "Dog Day Afternoon" a seminal influence."There was a gritty quality to those films -- they didn't really have a happy ending, and people could empathize with them," Campanella said. "I don't see myself in a lot of movies today. It's not easy to empathize with Wolverine."


"Secret" stars Ricardo Darin, a veteran of the Argentine screen, as a recently retired criminal court investigator who decides to write a novel about a 25-year-old rape-and-murder case that haunts him. His relentless pursuit, shown largely through flashbacks, resounds with themes of justice denied and unrequited love, while exploring truths concealed in the eyes of the film's characters.


Villamil, a talented tango chanteuse, plays the female lead, both as a young lawyer and a mature judge. But the performance that generated the most buzz here was that of Guillermo Francella, previously best known as a TV comic personality who plays a crucial role as the hard-drinking best friend of Darin's tortured character.When the Oscar was announced at about 1:15 a.m. local time, cheers could be heard on the streets from the apartments and homes of movie fans who had stayed up late to watch the results. Television, newspaper, radio and websites trumpeted the victory all day.


But Campanella is leery of the nationalistic aspects in a country where intense nationalism has historically been twisted for political gain.


"Of course I'm proud and happy to give people a reason to smile, but I'm wary of it being taken as such a national triumph," the director said. "What it really shows is that when a bunch of us get together and do our best, we can be at the top level of everyone else."


Among the best-known Argentine directors, besides Campanella, are Pablo Trapero, known for his stories of ordinary people, including "Crane World" (1999); Lucrecia Martel, acclaimed for her intense social portraits in films like "The Swamp" (2001); and Daniel Burman, who examines the identity of Jews in Argentina in films such as "Lost Embrace" (2004), a comedy- drama that received good reviews during a U.S. run.


Marcelo Piñeyro, a longtime Argentine filmmaker -- his latest, "Las Viudas de los Jueves" ("The Widows of Thursday"), was a commercial success here and is opening shortly in Spain -- sees strength in the diversity of Argentine movies, be they international hits like "Secret" or more boutique offerings about everyday life.


"I don't think Argentine filmmakers should be fighting each other like Boca versus River," said Piñeyro, referring to a storied soccer rivalry here. "There's not one way to do a good film but a broad palette of styles."


patrick.mcdonnell @latimes.com

8.3.10

El Oscar a "El secreto de sus ojos" (Clarín - Segundo cierre)


El secreto de sus ojos ganó el Oscar a la mejor película extranjera, el segundo de toda la historia argentina. El momento emotivo tuvo lugar a las 1.15 de la madrugada.

Juan José Campanella, el director de la exitosa película argentina, vista aquí por 2,5 millones de espectadores, subió al escenario junto a uno de los protagonistas, Guillermo Francella, y los productores españoles y uno de los argentinos, Vanessa Ragone.

"En nombre de un equipo y elenco compuesto por gente a la que quiero mucho, quiero agradecer a la Academia por no considerar al Na'vi como una lengua extranjera", bromeó.
"De manera personal -agregó-, quisiera agradecer a mis productores Gerardo Herrero, Mariela Besuievsky, Vanessa Ragone, Axel Kuschevatzky y Telefe. A Tom Bernard y Michael Barker, de Sony Classics."

Y yendo a lo realmente personal, concluyó: "Cecilia, encontraste a un tipo trabado en su desarrollo (usando un término de la jerga cinematográfica,
"development hell") e hiciste algo presentable con él. Gracias, muchas gracias. Los amo, les debo todo."

El cierre, mientras lo corría la música para sacarlo del escenario, fue en castellano y casi a los gritos: "¡Vamos Argentina y un abrazo a los hermanos de Chile!", por el terremoto sufrido hace pocos días.

A Campanella se lo veía casi tranquilo, parecía no caer respecto al gran momento que vivía y a la importancia que tenía el evento para el mundo cinematográfico y, a esta altura, para el país en general. Impactante debe haber sido recibir el premio de parte de dos talentos como Pedro Almodóvar -que le dio el premio y lo abrazó- y Quentin Tarantino, y tal vez eso agregaba a su cara de "susto".

Tras ganar el premio, el director dio una conferencia de prensa mientras aún la ceremonia seguía adelante. Allí dijo, entre otras cosas. "El premio que me dieron muestra que la Academia es muy abierta. A ellos no les preocupa la historia previa que trae cada filme, los premios que ganó, razones políticas ni nada parecido. Ellos votan las películas que les gustan y esto lo demuestra. También nominaron dos películas latinoamericanas y se creía que eso no podía pasar. Este proceso derribó todos esos preconceptos", dijo. Luego de la ceremonia, Campanella y su gente pasaron por el Governor's Ball y planeaban, ya a las 4 de la mañana hora argentina (alrededor de las 23 en Los Angeles) encontrarse en el Hotel Mondrian y festejar con todos los argentinos reunidos allí.

Horas antes, Francella y el director estaban excitados y nerviosos al entrar al Kodak Theatre. "Es bastante más loco que la otra vez. Más histeria. Ya se me acabaron las cosas para tomar para bajar la ansiedad", decía Campanella mientras se tocaba los bolsillos vacíos.
El actor contó -en la transmisión de Canal 13, a Catalina Dlugi- que prefirió usar traje negro a esmoquin y que, finalmente, consiguió una entrada para ir con su mujer a la ceremonia, algo que lo preocupaba el día anterior en la recepción en el Consulado argentino. "Es un sueño de toda la vida caminar juntos esta alfombra roja juntos", comentó.

Francella estaba mucho más confiado que Campanella en que la película podía ganar. Y quería que eso pasara para darle una alegría al pueblo argentino. "Te levantás a la mañana, mirás los noticieros y todo está mal, todo es triste, todo es inseguro. Te imaginas lo que es darle esa alegría a la gente. Ojala se dé", decía, emocionado por el aliento que recibió de los argentinos.

Campanella ganó el Oscar (Clarín)

PRIMER CIERRE

El secreto de sus ojos ganó el Oscar a la mejor película extranjera, el segundo de toda la historia argentina. El momento emotivo tuvo lugar a las 1.15 de la madrugada.
Juan José Campanella, el director de la exitosa película argentina, vista aquí por 2,5 millones de espectadores, subió al escenario junto a uno de los protagonistas, Guillermo Francella, y los productores españoles y uno de los argentinos, Vanessa Ragone.

"En nombre de un equipo y elenco compuesto por gente a la que quiero mucho, quiero agradecer a la Academia por no considerar al Na'vi como una lengua extranjera", bromeó.
"De manera personal -agregó-, quisiera agradecer a mis productores Gerardo Herrero, Mariela Besuievsky, Vanessa Ragone, Axel Kuschevatzky y Telefe. A Tom Bernard y Michael Barker, de Sony Classics."

Y yendo a lo realmente personal, concluyó: "Cecilia, encontraste a un tipo trabado en su desarrollo (usando un término de la jerga cinematográfica, "development hell") e hiciste algo presentable con él. Gracias, muchas gracias. Los amo, les debo todo."

El cierre, mientras lo corría la música para sacarlo del escenario, fue en castellano y casi a los gritos: "¡Vamos Argentina y un abrazo a los hermanos de Chile!", por el terremoto sufrido hace pocos días.

A Campanella se lo veía casi tranquilo, parecía no caer respecto al gran momento que vivía y a la importancia que tenía el evento para el mundo cinematográfico y, a esta altura, para el país en general. Impactante debe haber sido recibir el premio de parte de dos talentos como Pedro Almodóvar -que le dio el premio y lo abrazó- y Quentin Tarantino, y tal vez eso agregaba a su cara de "susto".

Tras ganar el premio, el director dio una conferencia de prensa mientras aún la ceremonia seguía adelante. Allí dijo, entre otras cosas. "El premio que me dieron muestra que la Academia es muy abierta. A ellos no les preocupa la historia previa que trae cada filme, los premios que ganó, razones políticas ni nada parecido. Ellos votan las películas que les gustan y esto lo demuestra. También nominaron dos películas latinoamericanas y se creía que eso no podía pasar. Este proceso derribó todos esos preconceptos", dijo. Luego de la ceremonia, Campanella y su gente pasaron por el Governor's Ball y planeaban, ya a las 4 de la mañana hora argentina (alrededor de las 23 en Los Angeles) encontrarse en el Hotel Mondrian y festejar con todos los argentinos reunidos allí.

Horas antes, Francella y el director estaban excitados y nerviosos al entrar al Kodak Theatre. "Es bastante más loco que la otra vez. Más histeria. Ya se me acabaron las cosas para tomar para bajar la ansiedad", decía Campanella mientras se tocaba los bolsillos vacíos.
El actor contó -en la transmisión de Canal 13, a Catalina Dlugi- que prefirió usar traje negro a esmoquin y que, finalmente, consiguió una entrada para ir con su mujer a la ceremonia, algo que lo preocupaba el día anterior en la recepción en el Consulado argentino. "Es un sueño de toda la vida caminar juntos esta alfombra roja juntos", comentó.

Francella estaba mucho más confiado que Campanella en que la película podía ganar. Y quería que eso pasara para darle una alegría al pueblo argentino. "Te levantás a la mañana, mirás los noticieros y todo está mal, todo es triste, todo es inseguro. Te imaginas lo que es darle esa alegría a la gente. Ojala se dé", decía, emocionado por el aliento que recibió de los argentinos.