Search
Go

Shop by category
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Bolivia
Email a friendView larger image

Bolivia

Our Price: $94.99
In Stock
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Only 1 left in stock, order soon!

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.
Description:

"Visceral, sanguine, extremely well directed. An essential film. Caetano is extremely talented." —Walter Salles, director of The Motorcycle Diaries

"Dazzling! Full of restless energy… Reminiscent of Taxi Driver." —Jamie Russell, bbc.co.uk

A starkly realistic story of an illegal immigrant from Bolivia who lands a job with a greasy spoon on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Bolivia poignantly depicts the world of poverty, racism and violence that characterize his newfound reality. Much like Do the Right Thing, tempers flare as discontented working-class people barrel toward tragedy. Shot in a lyrical, neo-realistic style, this taut film is an urgent and timely drama of life in Argentina, a nation in crisis that in the last few years has reached unprecedented poverty levels with vast unemployment, bankruptcy, and a shrinking economy. A multiple prizewinner in film festivals worldwide, Bolivia suggests that an important new voice is being heard. This second feature by Adrián Caetano, one of Argentina's rising stars in its miraculously fecund movie-making community, manages to be both powerful and understated.

Product Details:
Actors: Freddy Flores, Rosa Sánchez, Oscar Bertea, Enrique Liporace, Marcelo Videla
Director: Adrián Caetano
Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, DVD, Letterboxed, Widescreen, NTSC
Language: Spanish
Subtitle: English
Number of Discs: 1
Studio: New Yorker Video
Run Time: 75 minutes
DVD Release Date: October 18, 2005
Average Customer Rating: based on 7 reviews
You may also like ...
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 4.0
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.


0 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5Hardships provoke anger, hatred, jealousy!Feb 04, 2009


Director Israel Adrian Caetano was born in 1969, and has won several movie awards, but this is his directorial debut, 2001. Filmed in black and white the plot is little, the actors are excellent, and the social message is clear. It is the words that invoke so much anger, hate, jealousy, shame, by those struggling with economic and personal hardships. And inevitably, those words provoke the worst of man. The film is not gripping in action, but gripping in its message, words, reality, and pain all go through surviving.

Filmed in a Brazilian café that caters to the working class, the down and out, and those just ready for a quick meal. Enrique, the café owner, hires an illegal, Freddy, from Bolivia who for employment, has left a wife and children in Argentina.

Enrique, runs the small café with the help of Rosa the waitress while Freddy tends to the grill. It seems all that Enrique can do is manage the café, but yet he diligently attempts to monitor the outgoing meals versus incoming debt (tabs) from the low lifers, and ridding the deadbeats from passing out in the café.

The anger and hatred spews from the regulars, especially the taxi driver who is in deep despair, in debt, and in debt with Enrique at the café. The racist comments are heard and mean insinuations about immigrants taking work from the others. The N word is used, but my interpretation is the color of skin doesn't only apply to African Americans, it's an insult to one who may have darker skin. Continuing to keep his job, working hard, Freddy is keen to the ever present and erupting behavior; has a very watchful eye, and he, too, evolves in the circle of hardships.

One other film directed by Caetano to watch is Chronicle of an Escape. A soccer player's ordeal in prison, set in late 70's military coup. Warning, this is a film not everybody can watch, and I cannot, as a prominent theme is torture. Rizzo.


1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

4story that repeats for all imigrants.Jan 29, 2008
I am Bolivian and was disapointed that a Bolivian actor was not used, I can see the same descrimination against Argentinians in many countries, probably the least liked people in Latin America.
When a Bolivian peasant woman was pushed from a train and killed the "Grandmothers of the Missing" marched protesting and that showed that not all are the same.
It is a good film that can be a portrait of any imigrant in any foreign country.



4Poverty, racism, violence @ the greasy spoonJan 18, 2008
This film won many awards at various festivals throughout the world so I thought I'd view it. Besides, I like movies from Argentina. The universal theme of immigration is the underlying driving force of this stark , gripping , at times revolting movie. A young man from Uruguay and young woman from Paraguay come to Argentina(not knowing each other) and end up working together in the local grill. Several other characters are brought into the story , by way of location, you know, hanging out at the restaurant. All have one thing in common, they are poor and barely able to make ends meet. One guy eats off his extended restaurant credit. The racism that exists is portrayed as anyone of color is treated second class and insulted outright. Freddy, the man from Uruguay, is berated by everyone , including his benevolent(he advances his pay for a phone call) boss, Don Enrique. Rosa, the foreign waitress, isn't treated much better, has a passive aggressive personality, hangs her head and looks like a a beaten dog. The black and white imagery, dialogues that take place primarily in one room, makes for a dismal, depressing storyline. The occasional use of South American folk music breaks the tedium. You know the storyline is going down a dark alley of no return. The movie is short, coming in at slightly more than one hour but maybe that is all it takes to convey the message of the movie. If more people understood that immigration, coupled with poverty, is a story of survival than maybe Americans would be more tolerant. Check it out, the message is universal. The movie comes with subtitles for non-Spanish speaking viewers.

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:

4Might take multiple viewings but a definite winnerDec 09, 2006
I was pleased to come across this dvd at the newly built Bronx Fordham branch of the NYPL. Having not been to Argentina since before the current economic crisis(1994), I was curious to view the Argentina in one of it's roughest eras in almost 2 decades. I've heard the label "Do the Right Thing" Buenos Aires style. That only partly describes it. This story DOES take place in a restaurant, similar to Sal's Famous Pizza. And it does focus on racism and prejudice in a society, much like ours, that values it's "Whiteness." Although much shorter than Spike Lee's best movie, it does bear similarities and both are very good reference points for modern ideas of racism and prejudice. The "actors" are all referred to by their real names, hence main character Freddy is actually Freddy Flores, Paraguayan/Argentine waitress Rosa is really, you guessed it, Rosa. Shot in black and white on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, it shows an Argentina just barely hanging on. Bolivian "cocinero" Freddy arrives in Buenos Aires and immediately gets hired as a cook, where the customers at the restaurant are for the most part out of work. The tensions build as the story goes, but it is evident from the start. The only "ethnic" looking characters are the cook (Bolivian) and waitress (Paraguayan.) Both of these countries share borders with Argentina but might as well be 1 million miles away. Being of Argentine descent I can agree that most Argentines turn their noses up at their mestizo neighbors. The use of traditional Bolivian music is fantastic and the merging of Bolivian music and imagery is superb. I would like to see more short movies like this and although the scope of Argentine cinema is large this is a great example of Argentine film making.


8 of 8 found the following review helpful:

5Artistic Portrayal of a Universal Subject: ImmigrationJun 07, 2006
Coming to this movie with no expectations, I was pleasantly surprised. It deals with the plight of a Bolivian man who is forced to leave his country, and family, in search of work in Argentina, a society that is suffering from its own economic depression. Most of the movie takes place in the café where the Bolivian immigrant has found work as a cook. The frequenters of this establishment are suffering from their own economic hardships and resent the immigrant who is willing to work for less than them.

The film is in black and white and focuses on the daily interactions that take place in the café. While there is not a lot of action, you watch the tension build as the life of one of the characters begins to fall apart and he increasingly makes the Bolivian cook the focus of his anger. The movie also touches on the issue of racism. Well done and definitely worth watching.

Custom Search
 
 
About Us   Contact Us
Privacy Policy Copyright © , Reyes Avila. LLC. All rights reserved.
Web business powered by Amazon WebStore