Un Oso Rojo | |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Directed by | Israel Adrián Caetano |
Produced by | Lita Stantic |
Screenplay by | Israel Adrián Caetano Graciela Speranza |
Story by | Romina Lafranchini |
Starring | Julio Chávez Soledad Villamil Luis Machín Agostina Lage |
Music by | Mariano Barrella Diego Grimblat |
Cinematography | Willi Behnisch |
Editing by | Santiago Ricci |
Studio | Lita Stantic Producciones |
Distributed by | Cinema Tropical |
Release date(s) | October 3, 2002(Argentina) January 17, 2003 (United States) |
Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | Argentina France Spain |
Language | Spanish |
Un Oso Rojo (Red Bear or A Red Bear) is a 2002 Argentine, Spanish, and French drama film, directed by Israel Adrián Caetano.[1]
The film was produced by Lita Stantic, and the screenplay was written by Caetano and Graciela Speranza, from the story penned by Romina Lafranchini. The picture features Julio Chávez, Soledad Villamil, Luis Machín, and Agostina Lage, among others.
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Oso (Julio Chávez) is sent to prison for a robbery and a murder. After seven years, he is released from prison, and in a flashback, the robbery is seen that led to his arrest. His daughter, Alicia (Agostina Lage), was a year old on the day of the robbery. As a consequence, Alicia never got a chance to get to know her father.
Oso returns to his hometown, a depressed suburb of Buenos Aires, fully aware that his wife, Natalia (Soledad Villamil), is living with another man, Sergio (Luis Machín). Oso is determined to establish a relationship with Alicia, and to collect money owed him by a sleazy crime boss known as the Turk (René Lavand). In the meantime, the Turk wants Oso to be the getaway driver on one last big job. For her part, Alicia seems fascinated with her father and makes him promise never to go away again.
The film was first featured at the Cannes Film Festival on May 23, 2002. It opened in Argentina on October 3, 2002, making the picture Caetano's second film that opened in Argentina in 2002 (the last was Bolivia in April).
The film was also shown at various film festivals, including: the Gothenburg Film Festival, Sweden; the Havana Film Festival, Cuba; the Latin America Film Festival, Poland; the Lleida Latin-American Film Festival, Spain; the Cartagena Film Festival, Colombia; the Film by the Sea Film Festival, Netherlands; and the Helsinki International Film Festival, Finland.
In the United States, the picture opened at the Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2003. It also screened at the New Directors/New Films Film Festival, New York in March 2003; and the Milwaukee International Film Festival and Los Angeles in October 2004.
Film critic Neil Young thought the film was an engaging mix of crime thriller and family drama, and wrote, "[The film] is nevertheless an effective, if minor, foray into a dusty, neglected corner of modern-day Buenos Aires. We can feel Argentina's well-documented financial problems starting to sour the whole country's atmosphere, exerting unbearable pressures on the likes of Sergio, Oso and Natalia." Young also thought director Caetano elicited solid work from his actors.[2]
A.O. Scott, film critic for The New York Times, also liked the film and wrote, "Its combination of toughness and smooth, understated style makes it touching and absorbing..."[3]
And journalist Diego Batlle, who writes for the Argentine daily La Nación wrote, "Un Oso Rojo imposes itself as a piece of great dramatic power that ratifies a prolific director's narrative talent."[4]
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