Argentina, 1985

    Argentina, 1985
    2022

    Synopsis

    In the 1980s, a team of lawyers takes on the heads of Argentina's bloody military dictatorship in a battle against odds and a race against time.

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    Cast

    • Ricardo DarínJulio Strassera
    • Peter LanzaniLuis Moreno Ocampo
    • Alejandra FlechnerSilvia
    • Paula RansenbergSusana
    • Carlos PortaluppiJuez
    • Antonia BengoecheaMaria Eugenia
    • Laura ParedesAdriana Calvo de Laborde
    • Brian SichelFederico Corrales
    • Norman BriskiRuso
    • Héctor DíazBasile

    Recommendations

    • 90

      Screen Daily

      A courtroom drama with a committed, awards-worthy performance from Ricardo Darin, this tense, lengthy, frequently funny film stands with the best of the genre, but with added resonance.
    • 83

      IndieWire

      This may be an offbeat and textured snapshot of history, but it still holds at its core cold anger on behalf of the dictatorship’s victims and interest in how the people will receive updates about their future.
    • 80

      TheWrap

      As straightforward in its conception as its unfussy title, Mitre’s latest can be described as an effectively utilitarian piece of cinema that exists to preserve the historical memory of his homeland and to pay tribute to some of the people who ensured that for once, the arc of history, as insufficient and belated as it usually is, did bend towards justice.
    • 80

      Variety

      That Argentina, 1985 managed to toggle between such emotionally raw material and more amped-up, tension-driven subplots — as Strassera and his family weather death threats and cars explode in public squares — without seeming callous or dramatically opportunistic is a credit to Mitre, whose grasp on his story is high-key and emotionally immediate, but never glib.
    • 80

      Los Angeles Times

      In the hands of director and co-writer Santiago Mitre, co-writer Mariano Llinás and lead actor Ricardo Darín (“The Secret in Their Eyes”), Strassera is the slow-but-steady one in the story of “The Tortoise and The Junta: The Little Prosecutor Who Maybe Couldn’t, But Wouldn’t Quit.” He’s what one might call “endearingly competent.” The characterization they achieve is something rare and commendable: a lead who is interestingly uninteresting.
    • 70

      The Hollywood Reporter

      The balance between detail and momentum can at times be off, and the helmer doesn’t entirely avoid generic tropes of the legal drama. But he conveys the enormity of the undertaking at the film’s center — the first major war crimes trial since Nuremberg — and it’s felt in every moment of Darín’s compelling portrayal.
    • 70

      The New York Times

      Cinema prizes a good man making history, but this story’s heroes are manifold.