The Endless Film

La Película Infinita (The Endless Film or The Infinite Film) is a 2018 Argentinian experimental documentary film directed by Leandro Listorti,[1] his first feature-length work.[2][3][4]

Summary

La Película Infinita is a film essay[5] featuring an assemblage of never completed films[6][7] from the 1950s onwards from archives of a Buenos Aires film museum (for which the director is also curator), presenting an alternate parallel history of film and tracing a national cinema that never was invoking the ghosts of the country's dictatorial past.[8][4]

The following films[9][10] were featured in unfinished fragments:

  • Nicolás Sarquís’s failed 1984 adaptation of Zama (1984)
  • El eternauta (Hugo Gil; 1968)
  • La neutrónica explotó en Burzaco (Alejandro Agresti; 1984)
  • Sistema español (Martín Rejtman; 1988)
  • El ocio (Mariano Llinás and Agustín Mendilaharzu; 1999)

Release

It was released in Argentina on August 2, 2018 where it grossed $190.[11]

Reception

A review compared this assemblage of films to the "Frankenstein's method".[12] Another review found the film was failed and "mechanical".[13] A more appreciative assessment can be found at Desistfilm: "It is likely that everything lost at some point can have a second life, from the words that were not said to the images that were not filmed, La Película Infinita is just a sample of that videolibrary of Babel that is hidden somewhere and where all the lost cinema is kept; and we need more Listortis and Bill Morrisons that know how to show them before our eyes."[14]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.