La Antena

La Antena (English: The Aerial) is a 2007 Argentine drama film written and directed by Esteban Sapir. The film stars Valeria Bertuccelli, Alejandro Urdapilleta, Julieta Cardinali, with Rafael Ferro and Florencia Raggi in supporting roles.

La antena
Theatrical release poster
Directed byEsteban Sapir
Produced byFederico Rotstein
Written byEsteban Sapir
Starring
Music byLeo Sujatovich
CinematographyCristian Cottet
Edited byPablo Barbieri Carrera
Distributed byPachamama Cine
Release date
  • 24 January 2007 (2007-01-24) (IFFR)
  • 19 April 2007 (2007-04-19) (Argentina)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryArgentina
LanguageSpanish

Plot

The movie begins with a pair of hands typing on a typewriter. The denizens of a nameless city "in the year XX" have lost their voices. People communicate by mouthing out words that are spelled mid-air. The only person who has kept the use of her voice is La Voz ("the voice"), a singer working for the sole TV channel broadcast in the city, run by Mr. TV, who desires La Voz. La Voz wears a hood over her head that hides away her face. She has a son called Tomás, an eyeless little kid who nonetheless also has a voice (although this is kept a secret). Tomás lives next door to Ana, whom he one day befriends after a letter addressed to his house is erroneously delivered to hers.

Ana's parents are estranged - he works for Mr. TV as a TV repairman, she is a nurse at a hospital. When Ana loses a "balloon man" owned by the channel, her father and grandfather are fired from the studio. Soon enough, Ana's father stumbles upon evidence that La Voz has been kidnapped, and, together with Mr. TV's vengeful son, they set out to spy on Mr. TV. Ana's father pays his ex-wife to let them into the hospital, where Mr. TV and his henchman Dr. Y (a scientist whose lower head has been replaced with a TV screen showing a mouth) subject La Voz to a series of experiments of dubious nature. They plan to use La Voz's unique power to finally subdue the denizens of the city. However, Dr. Y theorizes that a second voice might counter the effect of La Voz's. Mr. TV's outraged son comes out of hiding, is overpowered, and then put away, by his father's henchmen, whereas Ana's father manages to escape with the aid of his wife.

The reconciled couple manage to rescue Ana and Tomás from Mr. TV's henchmen (led by a masked, malformed man referred to as "the Rat Man") and meet with the grandfather. Since Mr. TV is going to broadcast La Voz's voice and thus subdue all citizens, they have to broadcast a second voice to counter the effect. The grandfather suggests using an old station, The Aerial, abandoned in the outskirts of the city, in the snowy mountains. Tomás, Ana and her parents don inflatable suits (equal to those donned by "balloon men") which send them floating up in the sky. Just as the grandfather finishes elevating them, the Rat Man and his henchmen arrive and shoot him. The family are then propelled away into the mountains.

Meanwhile, Mr. TV and Dr. Y initiate the broadcast during a boxing match. The citizens become hypnotized and subsequently fall asleep. Words then start oozing out of their bodies - the machine that sucked out their voice now takes their words out of them. In The Aerial, the Rat Man and his henchmen storm into the station, stopping short Tomás's transmission. Ana's father and the Rat Man fight over a gun and stumble into a secret room in the station that reveals The Aerial's director, a young girl fitted inside a glass orb that oversees the production of the drugged food that keeps citizens under Mr. TV's control.

The gun goes off and kills The Aerial's director, who turns into an old woman after dying, and Ana knocks down the Rat Man. Back at the lab, Tomás's transmission sends Dr. Y into a choking fit and is finished off by Mr. TV. The transmissions counter each other and the citizens wake up, now able to use their voice (albeit without being able to speak). In the end, the family comes out of The Aerial, trying their new voices.

Cast

Deleted scenes

The DVD contains a number of deleted scenes that expand on the movie. Among these are featured a scene presenting the Rat Man looking at a family portrait of anthropomorphic mice, a scene leading to Ana's father and grandfather being fired (as well as a shorter episode where the grandfather laments the dismissal), a scene depicting La Voz stripping in front of Mr. TV (followed by her drugging and kidnapping), an altogether different introduction for Dr. Y (as well as a presentation of the transmission device) and both an alternate beginning and ending. The alternate beginning differs from the one in the final cut in that it explains the existence of "balloon men". The alternate ending does not contradict the final cut ending but rather expands on it: in the ending, after Mr. TV has finished Dr. Y off, La Voz frees herself from her bondage and realizes much to her rage that she now has a face but apparently cannot talk anymore. She then takes hold of a remote control and "deletes" Mr. TV. It also shows Mr. TV's son freeing himself from a chained television and proceeding to write on a typewriter (the shots matching those of two hands writing on a typewriter at the beginning of the film).

Production

The movie's script consisted of a mere 60 pages and a story-board of over 3,000 shots that took 5 months to draw. Principal shooting took 11 weeks and the post-production took more than a year for completion.

Exhibition

The film premièred at the Rotterdam Film Festival on 24 January 2007. It was the first time in 36 years that a film was chosen for both the official competition and opening of the Rotterdam Film Festival.

It was released to cinemas in the United Kingdom on 16 May 2008 by Dogwoof Pictures, with a DVD-Video release following on 18 August 2008.

Critical reception

Film critics liked the film, with one writing, "This was the most original film that I have seen since last year's Pan's Labyrinth. What was even more amazing was that the budget was estimated at $1.5 million, quite a bit of money in Argentina, but not for Hollywood. It just proves that you do not need $60 million dollars to do a film, especially one of quality. On a critical note, some viewers will be overwhelmed by the fast pace of the screenplay. Plus, with so many metaphors, one might have difficulty keeping up with what is actually going on. The production crew, headed by Daniel Gimelberg, brings out Esteban Sepir's imagination in full throttle."[1]

Awards

Wins

  • Clarin Entertainment Awards: Clarin Award, Best Film Director (Esteban Sapir); Best Original Film Music, (Leo Sujatovich); 2007.
  • Argentinean Film Critics Association Awards: Best Director (Esteban Sapir); Best Editing (Pablo Barbieri Carrera); Best Sound (José Luis Díaz); 2008.
  • A Night of Horror International Film Festival: Best Foreign Language Film; 2008.
  • Fant-Asia Film Festival: Fantasia Ground-Breaker Award (third place); 2008.

References

  1. Sapir, Esteban Archived 3 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine. Cinema Without Borders, film review, January 2007. Last accessed: 18 February 2008
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