![]() |
the international federation of film critics | ||||||||||
| | | | | | | ||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
|
Buenos Aires 2005 Filming a Strong and Defiant Community
|
||||||||||
![]() |
Yaccelini deftly unveils this unique universe and in so doing he draws a picture of larger scope: that of the lives, joys, hardships, dreams and worries of an entire community still deeply affected by the aftermath of Argentina's 2001 political and economic crisis. As in his previous films, in Los de Saladillo there's also a very appealing sense of discovery alongside acute exploration. Viewers are introduced to a rich canvas made up of testimonies, short interviews, snippets of the films made by Midí and Junco as well as many other rich details skillfully interspersed from the film's first frame to the last.
Instead of choosing a predetermined standpoint, Yaccelini exposes and confronts the many shades of his subject matter with utmost narrative precision and thus allows viewers to make up their own minds while - and after - seeing the film. Though the effects of the crisis are to be seen everywhere, there's also its opposite: the vital struggle to keep up the fight by creative artistic means such as the homemade feature films shot by Midí and Junco. For the townspeople of Saladillo have certainly found nurturing and playful ways that speak of a strong and defiant community unwilling to sink into depression in spite of the country's almost chronic instability.
Furthermore, Yaccelini once again shows uncanny wisdom to make viewers care deeply for people and situations that, in the hands of lesser filmmakers would not be nearly as appealing. For Yaccelini clearly knows how to take advantage of the freedom offered by the documentary format. Above all, he certainly knows what makes viewers tick and how to capture his audience.
| recent festivals |
Buenos Aires 2005 The Turning Sky Los de Saladillo |