Bad Company (1986 film)

Bad Company (Spanish: Malayunta) is a 1986 Argentine drama film written and directed by José Santiso and starring Federico Luppi, Bárbara Mújica and Miguel Ángel Solá.

Bad Company
Directed byJosé Santiso
Written byJosé Santiso
Jacobo Langsner (play)
StarringFederico Luppi
Bárbara Mújica
Miguel Ángel Solá
Release date
1986
Running time
92 min.
CountryArgentina
LanguageSpanish

The film is based on a play by Jacobo Langsner called Pater noster, which premiered in Uruguay in 1977 and was first staged in Argentina in 1981 by Teatro Abierto.[1] The film is a "thinly veiled allegory of life under a dictatorship"[1] and treats the topic of the Dirty War by denouncing "the complicity of large sectors of the civil population with the military." It earned praise as "the most profound, disturbing, uncompromising, and novel of all the films of the new democratic period to examine the years of terror."[2]

Synopsis

An impoverished middle-class couple rents a room in an apartment from an artist, who refuses to let them cook food in the apartment and keeps them awake at night, living a life of debauchery. The artist charges them enough for the room to cover the entire rent of the apartment. After the husband is attacked by a lunatic who appears to be the artist's brother, the couple takes over the apartment and ties the artist to a chair with barbed wire. They force him to eat red meat (he had been living on bread and milk) and attempt to cure him of "unhealthy lifestyle"; finally, they dismember him. The audience's perspective has changed: initially sympathizing with the couple, it becomes clear that they are a metaphor of the Argentinian bourgeoisie which was complicit in the "systematic slaughter of some 30,000 students, trade unionists, schoolteachers, and others accused of being 'terrorists.'"[1]

Cast

  • Federico Luppi as Bernardo
  • Bárbara Mujica as Amalia
  • Miguel Ángel Solá as Néstor
  • Edgardo Moreira as Puppeteer
  • Florencia Firpo as Angelita
  • Jorge Petraglia as Blind Man
  • Silvia Milet
  • Susana Nova
  • Jorge Capobianco
  • Martín Droso
  • Gianni Fiori
  • Mónica Lacoste
  • Laura Orgambide
  • Rubén Santagada

References

  1. Barnard, Timothy (1996). South American cinema: a critical filmography, 1915-1994. U of Texas P. pp. 74–75. ISBN 978-0-292-70871-6.
  2. Rodríguez, Rafael Hernández (2010). Splendors of Latin cinema. ABC-CLIO. p. 138. ISBN 978-0-313-34977-5.


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