Monday, October 14, 2019

Icarus Films Sets Dec. 10 As The Domestic DVD Debut Date For Director Benjamín Naishtat’s Rojo


DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey
Icarus Films will be teaming up with Distrib Films on Dec. 10 for the domestic DVD debut of Argentinian filmmaker Benjamín Naishtat’s awarding-winning neo-noir thriller, Rojo

After debuting at the Toronto International Film Festival in September of last year, Naishtat’s Rojo went on a globe-trotting journey, pulling in wins for Naishtat (Best Director - San Sebastián International Film Festival, among others) and the film’s star, Darío Grandinetti (Guadalajara International Film Festival, San Sebastián International Film Festival, etc.), and then capped it off with a sweep of the 2018 Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences of Argentina Awards for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay and both Best Sound and Best Editing awards.

The film opened theatrically in the United States during mid-summer of this year (and will continue with selected bookings through October and November).   For the record, the ARR comes in at 151 days and box office receipts generated from the film’s arthouse run currently stand at an impressive $91,213.

Before Naishtat could launch into his story, which takes place during the “Dirty War” years in Argentina in the mid-70s, he felt that he needed to get the period and setting just right.    Extensive research was done with a team that he assembled, which included a historian with special focus on the provincial aspects of Argentina during the period.   He also recruited Julieta Dolinsky and her talented crew to handle the production design and cinematographer Pedro Sotero to get the photographic “feel” of the period.

Once Naishtat got the details of Rojo just right, the casting and production followed and the result is a film that feels like it is taking place in 1975 on the eve of the military coup that would result in the “Dirty War” … a period where people simply “disappeared.”

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph TribbeyIt is here, in a small provincial town, that we are introduced to Claudio (Darío Grandinetti), a noted lawyer.   There is a house, a nice house, it is nearby his home and the owners have seemingly vanished.   That house will become a major “player” in the story, but first there is the incident at the restaurant.   

We find Claudio waiting at a popular restaurant for the arrival of his wife, Susana (Andrea Frigerio).   He has been seated ahead of another customer, who becomes incensed when Claudio just sits there, alone, waiting.   Finally this stranger (played by Diego Cremonesi) becomes so rude that he is tossed out.   Claudio’s wife arrives and that’s that.

Quite the story to share over dinner … and certainly something designed to set the viewer a little on edge and left to wonder what was that all about.   The meal ends and Claudio and Susana soon encounter the stranger outside the restaurant, who has apparently waited for them. 
 
DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey
One thing leads to another and the stranger ends up dead.    Report it to the police?   So many questions with that, especially when you add in the incident at the restaurant.   It was an accident, but Claudio decides it might be prudent to simply get rid of the body … and that will be that.

After a drive to the countryside — the sprawling Pampas — a grave is dug and the body disposed of.   Once back in town we are introduced to an “associate” of Claudio by the name of Vives (Claudio Martínez Bel) who has come up with an ingenious plan to “acquire” the vacant property — the locals have been coming and going at regular intervals looting the place.   A shady deal is set in motion.

Dead body, shady real estate deal … you can see how Rojo is building to something, but just exactly what?   

Time will pass, a detective will arrive (played by Alfredo Castro) asking questions about a “missing person,” more people will vanish — some quite deliberately because it can simply be done — and a grave may give up its secret.    Rojo is a suspense thriller that builds and builds … a thriller that works at several levels and certainly foreshadows a dark period in the history of Argentina that waits just over the horizon.

Rojo is presented in Spanish with English subtitles.      

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey



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