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Buena Vida Delivery

Buena vida delivery (2004) is an Argentine, French, and Dutch film, directed by Leonardo Di Cesare, and written by Di Cesare and Hans Garrino. The film features Ignacio Toselli as Hernan, Mariana Anghileri as Pato, and Oscar Nunez as Venancio, Pato's manipulative father, among others.

The movie was partly funded by INCAA.

Plot

This black comedy is about average people who live in Buenos Aires and are having a hard time making a living.

In the beginning, Hernan (Ignacio Toselli) helps his brother and his wife get ready for a their big move to Spain. His parents are forced to leave Argentina in order to escape the ravages of the country's economic crisis.

Hernan is left alone in the Buenos Aires suburbs. He works at an agency delivering messages on a small motorcycle. One day, at a gas station, he meets Pato (Mariana Anghileri), an attractive woman working the pumps. Hernan invites Pato to rent the room his brother vacated.

Pato is a mysterious young woman. She realizes Hernan likes her and she decides to go along in returning his advances.

Yet, Hernan is quite surprised when he comes home one night. Pato's parents and her young daughter have moved in without giving Hernan a warning. The father, Venancio (Oscar Nunez), a slick character, thanks Hernan, who thinks the move-in is temporary.

However, it seems that Pato's parents have come to stay. Dispossession laws in Argentina can be quite lengthly and costly. Venancio and his wife turn the kitchen into a small bakery making churros that are sold on the streets. Nothing that Hernan does to get rid of Pato's family who occupy the house. That is until he takes matters into his own hands and scares Pato's family.

Pato, who is not able to have a relationship with Hernan, is being pursued by a handsome young man, Jose Luis (Marcelo Nacci), a client at the gas station.

Pato realizes a her chance when she discovers that Jose Luis is much wealthier than Hernan.

In one scene we see Venancio, his wife and the young girl appearing at Jose Luis' building. In the next scene, Venancio is seated at the dinner table thanking Jose Luis with the same speech he used to thank Hernan.

Background

Basis of film

The film's backdrop is the economic crisis Argentina faced from 1999-2002. The poverty rate of Argentina grew from an already high 35.9% in May 2001 to a peak of 57.5% in October 2002. In addition, the May 2000 unemployment rate was 15.4%; it climbed to 18.3% in December 2001.

Cast

Ignacio Toselli as Hernan

Mariana Anghileri as Pato

Oscar Nunez as Venancio

Alicia Palmes as Elvira

Sofia da Silva as Luli

Ariel Staltari as Beto

Pablo Ribba as Seba

Marcelo Nacci as Jose Luis

Ricardo Niz as Colifa

Oscar Alegre as Roberto

Hernan Ticona as Ramon

Gabriel Goity as Dr. Linares

Distribution

The picture was first presented at the International Film Festival Rotterdam in the Netherlands on January 27, 2004. Later it was shown at the Toulouse Latin America Film Festival in France on March 22, 2004.

The film was screened at various film festivals, including: the Karlovy Vary Film Festival, Czech Republic; the Rencontres Internationales de Cinema a Paris; France; Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival, South Korea; Copenhagen International Film Festival, Denmark; the Biarritz La Cita Film Festival, France; the Chicago International Film Festival, USA; the Valladolid International Film Festival, Spain; and others.

Critical reception

Deborah Young, film critic for Variety magazine and reporting from the International Film Festival Rotterdam, liked the film and wrote, "Argentina's economic crisis furnishes fertile background material in Buena Vida (Delivery), a clever social drama spiked with black humor...Well-written and acted, pic vividly conveys the country's dire straits with clenched-teeth humor and compassion for all. It should benefit from the growing aud for Argentine product...From a low-key naturalistic drama, pic turns into an ironic comedy that catches the viewer up in seemingly unsolvable social and personal problems." Young, Deborah. Variety, February 19, 2004. Last accessed: February 17, 2008.

Film critic Ed Gonzalez, who writes for Slant Magazine, liked the film and the way director Leonardo Di Cesare approached the material and wrote, "Nostalgia sweetly and sensitively tinges the sobering film's emotional politics, as it does in Leonardo Di Cesare's Buena Vida Delivery, the story of a female gas station employee, Pato (Mariana Anghileri), who moves in with a young man, Hernan (Ignacio Toseli), whose parents leave Argentina in order to escape the ravages of the country's economic crisis. Infinitely more charming than Daniel Burman's self-obsessed Lost Embrace, the film is a romantic comedy that accommodates the dejected mood of the country's people...where Lost Embrace worried only for its main character, Buena Vida frets for an entire nation." Gonzalez, Ed. Slant, film review, 2005.

British film critic K.H. Brown liked considered the film deeply ironic and wrote, "Making black comedy out of national economic disaster, the title of this Argentinean drama can only be understood as deeply ironic. No one is being delivered a particularly good life. Rather, everyone is struggling to get by, doing what they feel is best for them and theirs...Straightforward, unflashy direction one suddenly notices the previous absence of music when a few ominous chords signal the beginning of act three, for instance is counterbalanced by well-observed and nuanced performances and a satisfactorily bittersweet resolution. If Buena Vida Delivery probably won't put film-maker Leonardo Di Cesare up there with the likes of Walter Salles and Gonzales Innaritu at the forefront of current Latin American cinema, it's a pleasing enough way to spend 90 minutes." Brown, K.H. Kinocite, film review, 2002-2005. Last accessed: February 17, 2008.

Awards

Wins

Clarin Entertainment Awards: Clarin Award; Best First Work - Film; 2004.

Mar del Plata Film Festival: Best Film, Leonardo Di Cesare; Best Screenplay, Leonardo Di Cesare and Hans Garrino: 2004.

Toulouse Latin America Film Festival, France: Grand Prix; Leonardo Di Cesare; 2004.

Valladolid International Film Festival, Spain: Best New Director, Leonardo Di Cesare; 2004.

Argentine Film Critics Association Awards: Silver Condor; Best First Film, Leonardo Di Cesare; Best New Actress, Mariana Anghileri; Best Screenplay, Original, Leonardo Di Cesare and Hans Garrino; 2005.

Nominations

Valladolid International Film Festival: Golden Spike, Leonardo Di Cesare; 2004.

Argentine Film Critics Association Awards: Silver Condor; Best New Actor, Ignacio Toselli; Best Supporting Actor, Oscar Nunez; 2005.

External links

Buena vida delivery at the cinenacional.com .

Buena Vida - Delivery film review at La Butaca .

Buena vida delivery film review at Cineismo.com by Josefina Sartora .

Buena vida delivery film review at La Nacion by Adolfo C. Martinez .

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Buena Vida Delivery


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