Watch Clandestine Childhood Movie Online No Survey Argentina, 1979. After years of exile, Juan (12) and his family come back to Argentina under fake identities. Juan's parents and his uncle Beto are members of the Montoneros Organization, which is fighting against the Military Junta that rules the country. Because of their political activities they are being tracked down relentlessly, and the threat of capture and even death is constant. However, Juan's daily life is also full of warmth and humor, and he quickly and easily integrates into his new environment. His friends at school and the girl he has a gigantic crush on, Maria, know him as Ernesto, a name he must not forget, since his family's survival is at stake. Juan accepts this and follows all of his parents' rules until one day he is told that they need to move again immediately, and leave his friends and Maria behind without an explanation. This is a story about militancy, undercover life, and love. The story of a clandestine childhood. (c) Film Movement Release Date Clandestine Childhood Jan 11, 2013 Limited | |
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Actors For Clandestine Childhood |
Teo Gutierrez Romero,Natalia Oreiro,Ernesto Alterio,César Troncoso,Christina Banegas,Cristina Banegas,Teo Gutierrez Moreno |
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Genres Clandestine Childhood : Drama,Romance |
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User Ranting Clandestine Childhood : 3.5 |
User Percentage For Clandestine Childhood : 75 % |
User Count Like for Clandestine Childhood : 146 |
All Critics Ranting For Clandestine Childhood : 5.8 |
All Critics Count For Clandestine Childhood : 10 |
All Critics Percentage For Clandestine Childhood : 50 % |
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Review For Clandestine Childhood |
Ávila can't quite thread the needle between telling his personal story and connecting it to larger social currents. Mark Olsen-Los Angeles Times
'Clandestine Childhood'' is the impressive first feature by Argentine director Benjamín Avila. V.A. Musetto-New York Post
When a filmmaker proves as reluctant as Mr. Ávila to speak up about the past, to engage with its full complexity, it can be hard to hear what he's saying. Manohla Dargis-New York Times
The calmer scenes are staged in staid and somewhat clunky fashion, but the graphic animation depicting the worst moments is starkly effective. Elizabeth Weitzman-New York Daily News
A charming, involving first feature, Clandestine Childhood muscles its familiar coming-of-age material into something more vibrant and urgent than the usual. Alan Scherstuhl-Village Voice
The pic has strong moments, but is bogged down by a script that regurgitates standard-issue ideas without finding anything interesting to say. Jay Weissberg-Variety
Ávila is an artist worth keeping an eye on. David Fear-Time Out New York
A solemn reverie about an urban guerrilla mother in revolutionary struggle, and the maternal ideal as ambivalent myth and martyr. Giving rise to the contemplation of art as an act of necessity, and the creative journey of the life of an idea in a film. Prairie Miller-WBAI Radio
Benjamín Ávila structures the film as a series of precious moments, remembrances of a difficult year when the politics of patria and family got in the way of his puppy love. Ed Gonzalez-Slant Magazine
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