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Rating: Summary: Is this life? Review: I'm a Social Comunication student. Not as an aspirant to journalism, but like a person, I can say this movie sucks... All mental and physical perturbations you can imagine, they're on this movie: masturbation, drugs (cocaine, LSD), smoking, pornography, prostitution, vomits, phecanophylia, Down syndrome, extortion, corruption, suicide, stealing, lies... I could tell you much more degenerations, but I'm very short speaking english. It's no the life, like you could think. This movie reflects a "forced reality" type, looking more like a impresionist triple XXX movie than a journalist life documental. The actors performance is very fake and there's no coherence at all between the individual actions. The cameras are good driven and the image is excelent, but that's all: the argument sucks, what can you expect from a movie based on a cheap novel? If you wanna read about the crudent realitys of Latin America without falling on the vulgarity, then go on with "Cuando quiero llorar no lloro" or "La muerte de Honorio" of Miguel Otero Silva. I read some parts of the novel Tinta Roja, as I saw the entire movie, and it's very incomplete in the argument aspect and in expressive resources. Shame on the people who celebrate this movie.
Rating: Summary: Peruvian movie based on Chilean novel Review: This film, listed among Mexican movies, is actually a Peruvian film directed by Francisco Lombardi (who also directed "Captain Pantoja and the Special Service", "The Lyon's Den", "Fallen from Heaven", etc). Ths particular release is based on the 1996 novel of the same name by Alberto Fuguet. It deals with tabloid journalism, following the changes of a young journalism student who is an intern at the newspaper.
Rating: Summary: Peruvian movie based on Chilean novel Review: This film, listed among Mexican movies, is actually a Peruvian film directed by Francisco Lombardi (who also directed "Captain Pantoja and the Special Service", "The Lyon's Den", "Fallen from Heaven", etc). Ths particular release is based on the 1996 novel of the same name by Alberto Fuguet. It deals with tabloid journalism, following the changes of a young journalism student who is an intern at the newspaper.
Rating: Summary: One of the best latin movies Review: This Peruvian film shows the reality in the latin-american press, It showed the drama and the typical dark comedy that is used in a sarcastic way against the goverment. The movie was very well made and the actors gave great performances.
Rating: Summary: Reporting on the Reporting Media in Peru Review: TINTA ROJA (Red Ink) is an excellent adaptation of Alberto Fuguet's novel by the same name that explores the world of tabloid journalism in Lima, Peru. Fuguet, himself a journalist as well as a brilliant Chilean novelist ("The Movies of My Life" etc), has provided an earthy story of a young writer Alfonso (Giovanni Ciccia) who longs to write novels, but sees, as his only entrance in to the writing arena, the job offered to him as a journalist following crime stories for a dingy tabloid edited by Faundez (Gianfranco Brero), a man with questionable scruples and secrets of his own. His philosophy : "News, like prostitution, is learned on the streets." And so our nascent reporter accompanies his boss to sites of murders, suicides, accidents, the drug scene, etc in the violent city of Lima, Peru. He is accompanied by a photographer Escalona (Fele Martinez) who captures the lurid details of the stories Alfonso attempts to stomach. Their driver is Van Gogh (Carlos Gassols, who all but steals this film!) who communicates in quotations both sensitively and hilariously from an international resource of famous people! Attempting to undercut Alfonso's reportage is Roxane (Yvonne Frayssinet), a seductive radio reporter who mingles with our staff in a humorous way. The love interest is provided by Nadia (Lucia Jimenez). The story builds in momentum until our idealistic hero finds himself swallowed up in the yellow journalism and smarmy lies and deceit that produces, only to find his way out with the discovery of his own dark genealogy and the help of his new friends.Fuguet's stories are not easy to watch (or read,) as he is unafraid of the underbelly of society. But despite the somewhat excessive depiction of violence and gore, this movie makes its point very well. The pacing is excellent, the acting is excellent, and the ending makes the journey worthwhile. Director Francisco Lombardi is the only major Peruvian director finding access to the international scene and he is a talent to watch.
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