El Aura

El Aura

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Fabián Bielinsky
Produced by Ariel Saúl
Victor Hadida
Cecilia Bossi
Written by Fabián Bielinsky
Starring
Music by Dario Eskenazi
Cinematography Checco Varese
Edited by Alejandro Carrillo Penovi
Fernando Pardo
Distributed by Buena Vista International
IFC Films
Release dates
  • 15 September 2005 (2005-09-15) (Argentina)
Running time
138 minutes
Country Argentina
France
Spain
Language Spanish
Box office $1,785,981[1]

The Aura (Spanish: El Aura) is a 2005 Argentine neo-noir[2][3] psychological thriller film directed and written by Fabián Bielinsky and starring Ricardo Darín. The plot revolves around Esteban Espinosa (Darín), an epileptic taxidermist who often fantasizes about committing the perfect crime. While hunting in Patagonia, Espinosa accidentally kills Dietrich (Rodal), a guide from the area, and discovers he is in fact a criminal. This unexpectedly connects him with the chance of executing a real crime: assaulting an armored truck carrying the profits of a casino in the area. Espinosa projects into his fantasies, assembling a puzzle piece by piece, inevitably enclosing himself in it.

The Aura received mostly positive reviews from critics upon its release, particularly for its screenplay and ambience. It won the Silver Condor for Best Film and was the Argentine entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 78th Academy Awards.

Plot

In neo-noir fashion El Aura narrates in the first person the hallucinating voyage of Espinoza, a quiet, cynical taxidermist, who suffers epilepsy attacks, and is obsessed with committing the perfect crime.

He claims that the cops are too stupid to find out about it when it's well executed, and that the robbers are too stupid to execute it the right way; and that he could do it himself relying on his photographic memory and his strategic planning skills.

On his first ever hunting trip, in the calm of the Patagonian forest, with one squeeze of the trigger his dreams are made real. Espinoza has accidentally killed a man who turns out to be a real criminal and he inherits his scheme: the heist of an armored truck carrying casino profits.

Moved by morbid curiosity, and later by an inexorable flow of events, the taxidermist sees himself thrown into his fantasies, piece by piece completing a puzzle irremediably encircling him. And he does it while struggling with his greatest weakness: epilepsy. Before each seizure he is visited by the "aura": a paradoxical moment of confusion and enlightenment where the past and future seem to blend.

Cast

Distribution

The film opened wide in Argentina on September 15, 2005. Later in the month it was presented at the Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival on September 30, 2005.

The picture was screened at various film festivals, including: the Sundance Film Festival, United States; the Toulouse Latin America Film Festival, France; the Alba Regia International Film Festival, Hungary; the Transilvania International Film Festival, Romania; the Film by the Sea Film Festival, Netherlands; the Helsinki International Film Festival, Finland; and others.

Reception

Critical response

El Aura garnered mostly positive reviews from film critics. On review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an overall 89% "Certified Fresh" approval rating based on 45 reviews, with a rating average of 7.5 out of 10. The site's consensus is: "The Aura is a highly original and cerebral thriller that maintains its suspense from start to finish."[4] At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted mean rating out of 0–100 reviews from film critics, the film has a rating score of 78 based on 19 reviews, classified as a generally favorably reviewed film.[5]

Critic A.O. Scott, who writes for The New York Times, liked the way director Fabián Bielinsky used the neo-noir style, writing, "Mr. Bielinsky made use of a familiar film noir vocabulary, but not for the usual young-filmmaker-in-a-hurry purpose of showing off his facility with genre tricks. Rather, his movies restore some of the clammy, anxious atmosphere that made the old noirs so powerful to begin with." He also mentions the early death of director Bielinsky. He said, "For his part, Mr. Bielinsky, in what would sadly be his last film, demonstrates a mastery of the form that is downright scary."[6]

Film critic Jonathan Holland, film critic for Variety magazine, liked the film and wrote, "An engrossing existential thriller from Fabien Bielinsky...Leisurely paced, studied, reticent and rural, The Aura is a quieter, richer and better-looking piece that handles its multiple manipulations with the maturity the earlier pic sometimes lacked...Featuring a career-best perf from Ricardo Darin, pic is a must-see in territories that warmed to Queens, while its superior production values could generate even bigger returns from international arthouse auds who enjoy their thrillers with a touch of distinction."[7]

Film critic David Wiegand thought that director Bielinsky tackled a bit too much in this film and wrote, "Bielinsky's latest film, The Aura, is in some ways more ambitious, which may be one of the reasons it doesn't work as well as it should...the careful camera work, beautifully dark cinematography and the quietly nuanced performance by Darín keep our attention, but in the end, the film's bigger challenge isn't its length, or its deliberate pace: It's that it's overly freighted with symbolism and meaning."[8]

Awards

Wins

Nominations

References

  1. "The Aura (2006)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
  2. Means, Sean P. "Aura (El Aura) The". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  3. Spicer, Andrew (19 March 2010). Historical Dictionary of Film Noir. Scarecrow Press. p. 437. ISBN 978-0810859609. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  4. "El Aura (The Aura) (2005)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 20 October 2013.
  5. "The Aura". Metacritic. Retrieved 20 October 2013.
  6. Scott, A.O. The New York Times, film review, "An Argentine Director's Unsettling Oeuvre", 17 November 2006.
  7. Holland, Joanathan. Variety, film review, September 19, 2005. Last accessed: 17 February 2008.
  8. Wiegand, David. The San Francisco Chronicle film review, page E-6, 5 January 2007.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 16, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.