Tiempo de valientes | |
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Directed by | Damián Szifrón |
Produced by | Oscar Kramer Hugo Sigman Kramer Sigman |
Written by | Screenplay: Damián Szifrón Contributing Writers: Agustín Rolandelli Nicolás Smudt |
Starring | Luis Luque Diego Peretti |
Music by | Guillermo Guareschi |
Cinematography | Lucio Bonelli |
Editing by | Alberto Ponce |
Distributed by | INCAA |
Release date(s) | Argentina: September 29, 2005 |
Running time | 112 minutes |
Country | Argentina |
Language | Spanish |
Tiempo de valientes (English: On Probation) (2005) is an Argentine comedy film written and directed by Damián Szifrón. Contributing writers for the film were Agustín Rolandelli and Nicolás Smudt. The film was produced by Oscar Kramer, Hugo Sigman, Kramer Sigman.[1]
The picture is a buddy-cop adventure.
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The film tells of Alfredo Díaz (Luis Luque) a cop who falls in depression after discovering that his wife has been cheating on him. Mariano Silverstein (Diego Peretti), a psychologist, tries to help Alfredo deal with his problem.
When Alfredo is invited to dinner to Silverstein's home, he unmasks Silverstein's wife, who also has an affair, which causes the psychologist and the cop to switch roles.
Díaz takes Silverstein with him on many adventures and both have to unravel a conspiracy of national proportions.
The film opened wide in Argentina on September 29, 2005.
It was shown at film festivals, including: the Málaga Film Festival, Spain; the Indie - World Film Festival, Brazil; the Villeurbanne Festival Reflets du cinéma ibérique et Latino-américain, France; and others.
Variety magazine film critic Jonathan Holland, liked the film although he had a few problems with the latter part of the film. He wrote, "A well-scripted and played Argentine buddy movie that generates fine comedy and decent thrills from an engagingly offbeat premise, On Probation is a surprising pleasure. Though things fall apart somewhat in the final reels, the solid work early on sees pic through successfully. Probation did good business at home following its September 2005 release, followed by unexpectedly healthy Spanish B.O. in 2006, suggesting pic could walk free in selected offshore markets beyond the Hispanic, with a cult following via fest play likely."[2]
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