El Perro
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El Perro | |
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Theatrical Poster |
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Directed by | Carlos Sorín |
Produced by | Óscar Kramer José María Morales |
Written by | Santiago Calori Salvador Roselli Carlos Sorín |
Starring | Juan Villegas Walter Donado |
Music by | Nicolás Sorín |
Cinematography | Hugo Colace |
Editing by | Mohamed Rajid |
Distributed by | Cinema Tropical Guacamole Films |
Release date(s) | Argentina Sept. 23, 2004 |
Running time | 97 minutes |
Country | Argentina Spain |
Language | Spanish |
Official website | |
All Movie Guide profile | |
IMDb profile |
El Perro (English: Bombón: El Perro and Bombón: The Dog) is an Argentine and Spanish, 2004 film, directed by Carlos Sorín, and written by Sorín, Santiago Calori, and Salvador Roselli.[1]
The picture stars Juan Villegas, Walter Donado, and others.
The movie, set in Patagonia, finds an unemployed Argentine have his luck change after being given a Dogo Argentino dog for a good turn, and this fine specimen is shown in dog shows.
The film was partly funded by INCAA.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
El Perro is a neo-realist fable that tells about a man and a dog.
Coco (Juan Villegas), the main character, is first seen trying to sell knives to a group of oil workers. He is a skilled craftsman, but the knives are too expensive for them. In fact, throughout the entire film, he never manages to sell a single knife, but he ends up giving two away: one to a security guard as a bribe, and one to a cabaret singer he meets on his journey.
It is apparent that Coco is down on his luck. He lives in a cramped apartment with his daughter and her children. Fifty-something, it looks increasingly unlikely that he will get another job. What he really wants is to work in a gas station, and during the first part of the film he is seen enquiring after such jobs.
Coco is a good natured man, despite his ill-luck, and he's seen helping a woman on the road whose car has broken down. This good deed leads to him being given an Argentine Dogo as a gift. The dog is a pedigree and the woman supplies him with all the documents. Coco is totally bemused, but keeps the dog.
His daughter asks him to choose - her or the dog. He chooses to keep the dog. The film now becomes a road movie. Coco calls the dog "Lechien" mistakenly believing that this is his name, in fact it is "the dog" in French and was written on his kennel. Eventually Coco realises the dog is incongruously called "Bombón."
From the moment he takes the dog Coco's luck begins to change. People ask him to guard buildings with the dog; a chance meeting with the bank manager leads him to Walter, a trainer. Walter assures him that the dog is pure gold. After the dog wins third prize at a dog show an eager Walter begins to make arrangements to have him put out to stud, this promises to be lucrative for them both, but the unfortunate dog is unable to perform.
Disillusioned, Walter takes the dog back to his ranch, and advises Coco to get settled somewhere and return for the dog later on.
But Coco feels lost without the dog, and returns to Walter's only to find the dog has escaped. On finding him again, Coco sets off into an uncertain future with two young hitchhikers in tow.
[edit] Exhibition
The film was first presented at the Donostia-San Sebastián International Film Festival in September 2004. The same month the film made its North American debut at the Toronto Film Festival on September 14, 2004.
In Argentina the film opened wide on September 23, 2004.
The picture was screned at various film festivals, including: the Nantes Festival of 3 Continents, France; the Cinémas d'Amérique Latine de Toulouse, France; the Hong Kong International Film Festival, China; the Muestra Internacional de Cine, Mexico; the Seattle International Film Festival, USA; and others.
[edit] Background
Casting
Carlos Sorín, in neo-realist fashion, used non-professional actors when he shot the film.
Filming locations
The picture was filmed in: Gaiman, Chubut; Patagonia; Río Gallegos, Santa Cruz; Trelew, Chubut Province; Tres Cerros, Patagonia; all in Argentina.
[edit] Critical reception
The film was well received by film critics.
Critic A.O. Scott, who writes for the New York Times liked the film. He said the film was "flawlessly directed by Carlos Sorin...[Jose] is half-seduced by dreams of glory, but the film's real concern is dignity. Juan (Juan Villegas), is as modest a hero as you are likely to encounter on a movie screen, and neither he nor Mr. Sorin — or, for that matter, Lechien — have especially grandiose aspirations. That El Perro is so unassuming is part of what makes its humane, sympathetic story so satisfying."[2]
Ed Gonzalez thought highly of the film. He said, "The jewel in the crown of The Film Society of Lincoln Center's Latin Beat program last year was Carlos Sorín's El Perro, which grabs the warm humanist baton from the director's Minimal Stories and heads straight for an existential finish line. With tender understatement, Sorín catalogs the depressing embarrassments an unemployed mechanic (Juan Villegas) is subjected to when he's unable to secure work or earn money for his homemade knives."[3]
[edit] Cast and ratings
Ratings | |
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Argentina: | Atp |
Australia: | M |
Brazil: | 12 |
Canada (Ontario): | PG |
France: | U |
Germany: | o.Al |
Ireland: | 12A |
Italy: | T |
Netherlands: | AL |
Spain: | T |
United Kingdom: | 15 |
United States: | Not Rated |
- Juan Villegas as Juan "Coco" Villegas
- Walter Donado as Walter Donado
- Gregorio as Le Chien aka Bombón
- Rosa Valsecchi as Susana
- Mariela Díaz as Coco's daughter
- Sabino Morales as Sabino, Coco's friend
- Claudina Fazzini as Claudina
- Kita Ca as Claudina's mother
- Carlos Rossi as Bank Manager
- Leda Cacho as Walter's wife
- Micol Estévez as Walter's daughter
- Diego Rozas Denis as Gelsi, Walter's friend
- Andrea Suárez as Hitchhiker
- Adrián Giampani as Galván
- Carlos Aguirre as Galván's boss
[edit] Gallery of screen images
Juan Villegas as "Coco." |
[edit] Awards
Wins
- Donostia-San Sebastián International Film Festival: FIPRESCI Prize, Carlos Sorín; 2004.
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ El Perro at the Internet Movie Database.
- ^ Scott, A.O. The New York Times, film review, "El Perro Brings Good Luck in Hard Times," June 9, 2006.
- ^ Gonzalez, Ed. Slant Magazine, film review, 2006.
[edit] External links
- El Perro at Metacritic.
- El Perro at the cinenacional.com (Spanish).