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pedro machuca movie

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The film portrays many Pinochet supporters either as rich and corrupt or as small-minded, reactionary bullies (which is not entirely inaccurate), but it certainly doesn't shy away from the dark side of the Allende revolution( Allende supporters are shown accosting middle-class Chileans in the street, Allende himself appears in actual TV footage of his notorious meeting with Soviet leader Leonid Breshnev). When Gonzalo and Pedro makes friendship,they faces a new world for both, where Pedro is always the 'poor boy that can be a thief'and Gonzalo 'the rich boy who doesn't have any problems and a perfect life'. Metacritic Reviews. External Reviews Pedro Machuca Manuela Martelli Silvana Aline Küppenheim Maria Luisa Federico Luppi Roberto Ochagavia Ernesto Malbran Father McEnroe Tamara Acosta Juana Francisco Reyes Patricio Infante Alejandro Trejo Willi Crew Andres Wood Director, Producer Andres Wood Director, Producer Carlos Johnson Casting Fernando Pardo In their school always have fights, and almost all the parents from Saint Patrick don't agree with the school new system. Maybe the fact that I am from Chile makes for me this movie so great, because its based on a historical moment that is so close in society but in a major reason the fact that the Director dedicate this movie to a priest of my school that died like a year ago. The movie is excellent in the way it portrays the everyday life experienced back in those days. From laughs to really hard to stand emotions, Political Chaos from the Vantage of Children's Eyes, subtle political drama is very good for a chilean movie, In Times of dictatorship,two boys from opposite classes make friendship. Set in 1973 Santiago during Salvador Allende’s socialist government and shortly after General Augusto Pinochet’s military coup in 1973, the film tells the story of two friends, one of them the very poor Pedro Machuca who is integrated into the elite school of WITH: Matías Quer (Gonzalo Infante), Ariel Mateluna (Pedro Machuca), Manuela Martelli (Silvana) and Ernesto Malbrán (Father McEnroe). I don't normally feel emotional after watching movies, but at the end, when the director played the song "Mira Niñita" from Los Jaivas, I almost cried. In those days, Chile was undergoing a dire economic crisis, which forced him to travel to the Soviet Union to ask for a loan. It does not romanticize the Allende government or the difficulties (riots, shortages, etc. This movie was definitely one of them. Two 12-year-old Chilean children from different social classes become friends in 1973. As a result of the scarcity of basic needs, people had to stand in extremely long queues in order to obtain products like bread and milk. The television proclaims that the army has restored order, and a newspaper headline proclaims the return of normalcy. Santiago, capital of Chile during the Marxist government of elected, highly controversial president Salvador Allende. However, in those years those animals were seldom seen in the streets. Pedro is one of a group of “scholarship students” that the head priest has invited to St. Patrick’s in an attempt to create a bit of equity in society. Andrés Wood is a highly regarded Chilean filmmaker, a man unafraid to take on controversial issues and present them in a manner that is revelatory to his audience, whether that audience is in Chile or other South American countries - or in Europe or North America. There are moments that feel forced and schematic -- in particular those that insist on revealing Gonzalo's school as a microcosm of a society riven by class and ideology. Set against the background of the political instability that led to the crisis, Andrés Woods' Machuca is the moving story of the friendship between two boys from different sides of the social spectrum. ... Pedro and Silvana. ! One of them is Pedro Machuca, slum-raised son of the cleaning lady in Gonzalo Infante's liberal-bourgeois home. Mr. He's seated behind Gonzalo, a well-to-do boy, and the two become friends. Santiago, capital of Chile during the Marxist government of elected, highly controversial president Salvador Allende. But "Machuca" nonetheless has a tough, heavy clarity. Chile's always been a country full of wandering cats and dogs. The movie takes place during the months leading up to the dictatorship when Pedro Machuca, a working class Chilean boy, starts attending one of the country’s finest private schools and befriends the privileged student Gonzalo. At the private English-language boys' school Gonzalo attends, the headmaster (Ernesto Malbran), a priest flush with the experimental, egalitarian spirit of the Allende government, has granted scholarships to a few boys from the nearby slums. I believe that this is one of the best Chilean films ever made. Culturally, it represents the urge by the conquering Christians to challenge the hegemony of Moorish architecture in the recently (1492) acquired province of Granada. Father McEnroe supports his leftist views by introducing a program at the prestigious "collegio" (Catholic prep school) St. Patrick to allow free admission of some proletarian kids. Many on the left criticized Allende for not calling out the army, a mistake Chávez was not to repeat. Someone like my mother, who has seen the atrocities that occurred in Chile in the mid-seventies, would be a more appropriate critic of this film. The last 30 years of Chilean history is a tale full of pain, sorrow, misunderstanding, intolerance, twisted economic interests and searching of ideals. Its point is not to settle scores or reopen old wounds, but rather to explore, after a long period of repression, the possibility of grief. In a way, this movie describes how this "story of pain" began and was developing until a horrible finale. A movie about hate. FILM REVIEW Correction: January 21, 2005, Friday A picture caption on Wednesday with a film review of "Machuca" misidentified the actor shown. When the bully picks on Pedro Machuca (Ariel Mateluna), Gonzalo stands by him, and the two become friends. This film reaches back and looks at history in a very intimate and personal way. User Ratings Santiago, capital of Chile during the Marxist government of elected, highly controversial president Salvador Allende. Pedro Machuca (c. 1490 in Toledo, Spain – 1550) is mainly remembered as the Spanish architect responsible for the design of the Palace of Charles V (begun 1528) adjacent to the Alcazar in Granada. The friendship of the two boys — whose frequent companion is Silvana, a spritied girl from the shantytown where Pedro lives — develops as the country slides into political turmoil. Pedro (Machuca) lives in a shanty town, and is the son of the woman who cleans house for Gonzalo’s family. This is almost the first Chilean film I've seen, and I was totally blown away by it. History Through the Eyes of a Frightened Child. The only negative comment I heard as I was leaving the cinema was, "It was amazing, but, its only the story of a split second of events...there were so much more pain and so many more victims.". The audience, aware from the start that the military coup against Salvador Allende's government lurks on the horizon, feels their sympathy for this child -- and their more general nostalgia for childhood -- shadowed by anxiety and dread. He and Gonzalo form an increasing bond of friendship as they grow into adolescence. The film is set in 1973 when Salvador Allende was the president of Chile. An impressive description of extraordinary events. While the film is titled Machuca, it is largely seen through the eyes of Gonzalo and it is his coming of age story. It certainly doesn't paint the Pinochet coup in a very favorable light, but I don't see how you can make the overthrow of a democratically-elected government and the murder, torture, and disappearance of some 3,000 people look like a wonderful thing. Our film is shot in Santiago, Chile, and follows two schoolboys shortly before the 1973 military coup. There, he meets Pedro Machuca, one of the many boys who came to study in Saint Patrick with the help of the priests, who wants to make a integration and democratization where everybody independent from their classes, have the same rights to study in good schools. Knowing that there remains a divided opinion of this period of time, a time when Allende supporters who could not escape the country were murdered or placed in detention camps as political prisoners, Woods sensitively recreates this period through the eyes of children from the populace divided by the middle class and the poor, a technique which works on every level. It is useful to compare these events with those 30 years later in Venezuela. Meanwhile Gonzalo Infante gets a rude awakening when his teacher begins to integrate students from the lower class. ! And there is a very powerful end which I won't reveal, but you'll see it coming if you know history. The three friends help Silvana's father take advantage of the political situation by selling flags at competing demonstrations, and play kissing games on the banks of a muddy creek. We are made aware of problems, however, Gonzalo's sister's boyfriend is scary, and later we see him in a fascist demonstration. This is an absolutely wonderful film that captures a very interesting period of history told as a coming-of-age tale from the perspective of three pubescent school children. Machuca: 2004: 121: NR: Ending: Santiago, Chile, 1973: Pedro is a poor, native boy, brought into an upper class school during Chile's brief socialist time. Yet the new classmates become buddies, paradoxically protesting together as Gonzalo gets adopted by Pedro’s slum family and gang. Machuca (Movie): Summary & Analysis. The movie, as one might imagine, has no happy ending. | There is no meat, no vegetables, no milk in the stores. Directed by Andrés Wood; written (in Spanish, with English subtitles) by Roberto Brodsky, Mamoun Hassan and Mr. Wood; director of photography, Miguel Joan Littin; edited by Fernando Pardo; music by Jose Miguel Miranda and Jose Miguel Tobar; production designer, Maria Eugenia Hederra; produced by Mr. Wood, Gerardo Herrero and Mr.Hassan; released by Menemsha Films. The story is about a rich boy who studies in a rich school when the principle decides to bring in poor students for free. Mr. Wood allows the story to unfold at a leisurely, almost dawdling pace, which matches the consciousness of his young protagonist. The movie was set in 1973 in the city of Santiago during Salvador Allende’s socialist government reign all the way until General Augusto Pinochet’s military coup, which I’ll explore later. | Generally, these were not enough, so they had to do anything to satisfy their hunger. The film follows the story of 11 year old protagonist, Gonzalo Infante, and his eventual friend Pedro Machuca. Machuca is a 2004 Chilean film written and directed by Andrés Wood. INTERNATIONAL SALES: LATIDO FILMSwww.latidofilms.comwww.facebook.com/latidofilmswww.twitter.com/latidofilmslatido@latidofilms.co… The priest who was the principal and the liberal teachers disappear, reminiscent of "Au revoir les enfants." A O Scott reviews movie Machuca, directed by Andres Wood and starring Matias Quer; photo (M) Sections. I live in Chile, where the movie happens. One of them, Pedro Machuca (Ariel Mateluna), becomes Gonzalo's friend, and introduces him to another side of life in Santiago. Both expose us to the reality of those events through the intriguing new perspective of the eyes of children. His own life is the middle of a crisis, and suddenly he is in the middle of his own country's political storm. Gonzalo Infante is the son of a wealthy, upper middle class family and goes to a good school. The friendship of the two boys — whose frequent companion is Silvana, a spritied girl from the shantytown where Pedro lives — develops as the country slides into political turmoil. Directed by Andrés Wood. When the CIA-engineered coup happened there, Venezuelans were ready, and the coup failed. The significance of this work is that it represents likely the first major classic Renaissance style building in Spain. But the gulf between their backgrounds is a powerful one. Allende had nationalized industry and agriculture, and embarked on a massive literacy program for Chile. Their intense, limited way of perceiving the world, sometimes sentimentally rendered as moral innocence, is one of the reasons they are frequently placed at the center of movies about war, revolution and other forms of social upheaval and political disaster. One of them is Pedro Machuca, slum-raised son of the cleaning lady in Gonzalo Infante’s liberal-bourgeois home. But historical circumstances rule out false comfort or redemptive optimism. The situation for Chileans couldn't be worse: enterprise owners, against left-winged governmental policies, were very reluctant to produce. "Machuca" is an excellent film for all ages made by Chilian filmmaker Andres Wood.The best thing which can be said about "Machuca" is that it is one the those rare films which are a superb visual statement on human condition.It is true that young children will surely have a lot to learn from this film but adults can also learn a thing or two if they make up their minds to reduce conflicts in the world.Some of the major issues discussed in this film are about friendship,sexual awakening,class differences,trouble at home,trouble with church and trouble with military.In this film it is nice to see how two young boys tackle above mentioned themes with courage,determination and dignity.A moral lesson to be learn from "Machuca" is that weak souls are strong in dealing with all kinds of emotional adversities.Although films featuring young protagonists are a common trend in the annals of world cinema nevertheless Muachuca remains a totally different film as it is about self discovery,knowing one's limitations and keeping one's head straight even in the times of adversities.This is a must see film for all admirers of serious cinema,meaningful films and Latin American history. Children see more than they understand, and understand more than they know. The rich kid is making friends with a poor kid (Machuca) and they enjoy life together while everything falls apart around them. Its interesting to see this movie in the theater and hear older people in the audience booing and cheering at the different scenes and historical characters in the movie, meaning that it accurately depicts the events. "Machuca," which opens today at Film Forum and which is Chile's submission to this year's Academy Awards, is both sweet and stringent, attuned to the wonders of childhood as well as its cruelty and terror. Running time: 120 minutes. Yet the new classmates become buddies, paradoxically protesting together as Gonzalo gets adopted by Pedro's slum family and gang. Pedro Machuca (Ariel Mateluna) is one of the new students, and while he and his fellows are picked on by the school's bullies, Pedro is a brave kid who stands his ground, and he's soon befriended by Gonzalo Infante (Matías Quer), whose rich parents live in Santiago's wealthy suburbs. The great special effects used, increase the realism and makes the movie so much better, and you don't even notice they are being used. Pedro chastises his father. It s set in the "revolution" days in Chille when the Facists came to power. One of these new students, Pedro Machuca soon becomes Gonzalo's friend; friendship that will soon be tested as the political conflicts become increasingly hard to ignore. She cried as we watched and explained all of the small details I wouldn't have gotten being someone who didn't experience these events for myself. The friendship between Gonzalo and Pedro shows how arbitrary they are, and how affection and decency can overcome such differences. Santiago, capital of Chile during the Marxist government of elected, highly controversial president Salvador Allende. I must start with saying that this is probably one of the best movies of the year if not of all times. But Pedro is poor,lives in one of the worst places near school and barely has clothes to wear: the opposite of Gonzalo. ! But the scenes of soldiers taking over Gonzalo's school and subduing Pedro's neighborhood show the reality behind the euphemisms. His parents are outraged that children from the poor shanty towns are being introduced to the school and encouraged to mix with their children. I have also followed Andres Wood in his career as a Director and I must say that this is his most mature, rounded and strong piece of work. This movie tells a tale on the eve of the darkest hour in Chileann history, where two boys of different social background become friends. Awards This is a film which can easily make François Truffaut weep inconsolably ! Gonzalo befriends Pedro Machuca (Ariel Materluna) and, in doing so, not only learns to see the "other side" as real people, but learns of the primitive living conditions of the poor in Santiago. PLOT . Gonzalo Infante is a rich boy, who studies in an elite and American school called ' Saint Patrick'', one of the best schools from Chile. The bourgeois boy Gonzalo Infante (Matías Quer) and the boy from the slum Pedro Machuca (Ariel Mateluna) become great friends, while the conflicts on the streets leads Chile to the bloody and repressive military coup of General Augusto Pinochet on 11 September 1973, changing definitely their lives, their relationship and their country. For the most part Mr. Wood, who based the film on events from his own early life, confines the story to Gonzalo's perspective. Mr. Pedro (Ariel Mateluna), who comes from modest means, gets a free ride to an elite Catholic boarding school run by the forward-thinking Father McEnroe (Ernesto Malbran). Pedro is one of several impoverished children, who are introduced to the school by free-spirited priest Father McEnroe. Intimations of Chile's volatile political situation pop up almost casually, via the television set, graffiti in the street and overheard adult conversations. The military coup results in the repression of el pueblo, directly affecting Pedro's family.Gonzalo, however, can carry on with his life at the private school, saved by the colour of his skin and his Adidas trainers bought in Buenos Aires. There, he meets Pedro Machuca, one of a number of poor boys granted scholarsips by the headmaster, a priest flush with the egalitarian spirit of the times. His new classmate, Pedro Machuca (Ariel Mateluna), lives in a recently created illegal shantytown a few blocks away with his cousin, Silvana (Manuela Martelli). While Mr. Wood's political sympathies are clearly with the victims of the coup, he never suggests that the events of September 1973 were simple, or that they can be easily understood. FAQ They both discover each other's world as political tensions in their country increase. The youthful condition it evokes most strongly is not innocence but impotence -- the discovery that you are powerless to protect the people you care about from harm, and also powerless to protect yourself against the shame of your own failure. One of them is Pedro Machuca, slum-raised son of the cleaning lady in Gonzalo Infante's liberal-bourgeois home. "Machuca," from Chile, is a fine, exciting film that makes a bloody historical event live all over again by showing it through the eyes of children on the edges of the conflict. Among the shanty town dwellers is the young Pedro Machuca. ABOUT THE MOVIE. He was Ariel Mateluna, who portrays Pedro Machuca -- not Matias Quer, who plays Gonzalo Infante. Father McEnroe supports his leftist views by introducing a program at the prestigious "collegio" (Catholic prep school) St. Patrick to allow free admission of some proletarian kids. 1973,Chile. It is a tale of a friendship across class and political boundaries and it is told through the observant eyes of children. But there is no queston that Gonzalo's private world, like his country, is in a state of ferment. The director chose excellent actors, and his idea for his movie was very creative. The main characters in the film may be seen and not heard but they are definitely all seeing and it all culminates in a shocking climax to the film. Gonzalo is one of the lucky ones, a young man who escaped the horrors while he learned how to become a better human being. There, he meets Pedro Machuca, one of a number of poor boys granted scholarsips by the headmaster, a priest flush with the egalitarian spirit of the times. This film is not rated. The movie is apolitical in the way the main characters are children, so the focus is everyday life more than taking an actual view. Succeeds on both a human and political level, point of view of a 26 year old Chilean American, Touching and Realistic Tale of Friendship and Coming to Age in Times of Military Coup, This movie is about a child living in 1973, where Chile was politically imbalanced, Two schoolboys from different backgrounds live through the transition from Allende to Pinochet. The coup happens, and the army takes over the schools. The Plot is amazing, but also visually is so beautiful so much emotion that grows even better with the wonderful soundtrack. One could say that without Allende there would be no Chávez. It is set in the year 1973 when then Chilean Socialist President Salvador Allende was on the verge of being overthrown by a military coup. Father McEnroe supports his leftist views by introducing a program at the prestigious His father responds by prophesying the future friendship between Pedro and Gonzalo. The greater achievement of the film lies in showing both the weakness and the tenacity of those divisions. With Matías Quer, Ariel Mateluna, Manuela Martelli, Aline Küppenheim. Good films sometimes come together in pairs or small waves. With this in mind, I have to think this movie was meant to be watched by a Chilean audience to be fully understood and "felt". Machuca is a 2004 Chilean film written and directed by Andrés Wood. )that the country went through during his turbulent reign. Mr. Machuca assaults Pedro's mother and robs his family of their savings, which he spends on drink. I knew nothing about this movie when I won a couple of tickets to see it in a local Film Festival. Both films are set during tumultuous times in Latin America. Voted the most popular film at the 2004 Vancouver Film Festival and a major box-office hit in Chile, the semi-autobiographical film succeeds on both a human and a political level, the different elements coming together in a final conflagration. You sit there in the dark glued to your seat and you forget time, your popcorn and companion. Based in Santiago, Chile, during the turbulent year of 1973, Andres Wood's latest film details the childhood of Gonzalo (Mathias Quer) and the friendship he forms with Pedro Machuca (Ariel Mateluna), a new boy at school. The film is about children who get along, and then get separated. ... One of them, Pedro Machuca (Ariel Mateluna), becomes Gonzalo's friend, … Although i was not old enough to live through these events, its repercussions are still felt today. Father McEnroe supports his leftist views by introducing a program at the prestigious "collegio" (Catholic prep school) St. Patrick to allow free admission of some proletarian kids. Machuca gives you a glimpse of an era, a snapshot of a piece of Latin American history that is so complex many people do not dare broach the subject. The newcomer takes him along when his uncle (Alejandro Trejo) and his cousin Silvana (Manuela Martelli) sell flags at two competing demonstrations — one … Machuca is by far one of the best Chilean movies ever made. This happens because their families belong to different political sides, in a time and place where this was big deal. The coup led to the murder of 3,000 leftist Allende supporters and the detention of an estimated 250,000 political prisoners. Although he had no need to declare war against the coup, Chávez had worked for 30 years with his men as lieutenant colonel, and gained the undying devotion of soldiers and population alike. In 1973, the Chilean military, under the direction of General Augusto Pinochet and backed by the CIA, overthrew the shaky socialist government of democratically elected President Salvador Allende. I watched the film with my mother, who lived through the coup d'etat in Chile. Specifically, the film follows Gonzalo as his loyalty is caught between his middle-class, and mostly right-wing family, and his two new friends, Pedro and Silvana, who come from a newly erected slum in the capital city Santiago. Machuca is a much more subtle and subdued film than its Mexican companion almost throughout, yet still manages to maintain our interest with some marvelous scenes capturing youthful innocence and its gradual but certain loss. | Chile, 1973. Gonzalo (Matías Quer), the 11-year-old boy at the center of Andrés Wood's "Machuca," is warily edging toward adolescence, preoccupied with the petty brutality of the schoolyard and the unspoken miseries of his upper-middle class Santiago household. You know, best movies are so intense that you can even taste them. In 1973, in Santiago of Chile of the first socialist president democratically elected in a Latin-American country, President Salvador Allende, the principal of the Saint Patrick School, Father McEnroe (Ernesto Malbran) makes a trial of integration between students of the upper and lower classes. The bourgeois boy Gonzalo Infante (Matías Quer) and the boy from the slum Pedro Machuca (Ariel Mateluna) become great friends, while the conflicts on the streets leads Chile to the bloody and repressive military coup of General Augusto Pinochet on 11 September 1973, changing definitely their lives, their relationship and their country. In that sense Machuca makes a fine companion to the Mexican film Voces Inocentes, also released in 2004. To get the situations worst,Chilean society is in one of the hardest transitions that already happened, from Allende to Pinochet, where communists are against bourgeois and vice versa. Gonzalo Infante and Pedro Machuca are two eleven-year-old boys who live in Santiago, the former in a wealthy neighborhood and the latter in a recently created, illegal shantytown just a … This Movie is without the shadow of a doubt the greatest Chilean movie ever, maybe a top 250 contender. But because his coming of age takes place in Chile in 1973, his ordinary hardships, joys and rites of passage are charged with inordinate tension. At the Film Forum, 209 West Houston Street, west of Sixth Avenue, South Village. On the other side of the coin, wealthy people used to go to places where these goods were sold secretly without standing any lines. Really though it would be a shame if continuing political differences stop people from seeing this superb film which really transcends politics to capture the spirit of youth and a time that, as terrible as it was, will never be forgotten. A soft-faced, passive boy, he is forced to accompany his mother (Aline Küppenheim) on visits to her lover, an older, wealthy sensualist who buys the boy's complicity with handsome bound editions of Lone Ranger comics. Its young protagonist is shown, growing up, not quite understanding what is happening around him. Chileans will recognize the hand of the CIA in collusion with the Chilean oligarchy, and the counterfeit money that was introduced into the country by the US to create inflation and scarcity and bring down the regime. At home, Gonzalo has to deal with his weak-willed father and his sister's loutish boyfriend. Political, social and class taboos are covered in a sympathetic and innocent way and, are illustrated by the filming of stunning views of Chile. The events depicted in the movie were so realistic, they transported her back to that era.

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