|
Ana Sayfa >> Makaleler >> Tango Filmleri TANGO FİLMLERİ
|
| FİLMİN İSMİ | KISA BİLGİ |
|
Tango: Baile Nuestro |
An Argentine Documentary Film about Tango Jorge Zanada's "Tango: Our Dance" refers to the people of Buenos Aires for whom the Tango is much more than a dance. It is a ritual imbued with great sensuality and style. Director Jorge Zanada is not offering up an extended music video, because this documentary looks at how the Tango fits uniquely into the culture of Argentina focusing on the elements of passion and machismo contained within the dance. "Tango Baile nuestro" won the Golden Precolumbian Circle Best Documentary Award at the 1989 Bogota Film Festival. Ultimately, this film is more about culture than it is about dance per se. |
| Assassination Tango | (2002) Directed by and starring Robert Duvall as a hit man sent to Argentina to kill a general. While waiting for his mark to return, he learns the tango from Manuela (Luciana Pedraza). |
| The Four Horsemen of The Apocalypse |
(1921) Directed by Rex Ingram and starring Rudolph Valentino as Julio Desnoyers, the tango-dancing French grandson of an Argentine cattle baron who ends up battling his German cousin in World War I. |
| El Dia Que Me Quieras (The Day That You Love Me) |
(1935) Starring Carlos Gardel. No one ever mistakes Gardel's films for cinematic masterpieces, but any excuse to see him sing is worth it. El dia is one of his best. |
| Tango | (1998) Directed by Carlos Saura. A "film-within-a-film" about a director (Miguel Angel Sol) trying to make a tango film. Saura, who also directed the 1995 Flamenco, understands the dance better than most. |
| Last Tango İn Paris | (1972) Directed by Bernardo Bertolucci and starring Marlon Brando as Paul, an expatriate widower in Paris who has an anonymous affair with Jeanne (Maria Schneider), the fiancee of a film director. Looking for a film school dissertation? The entire film is a tango -- in its rhythms, emotions, style ... even camera angles and movements. Discuss. |
| The Tango Lesson | (1997) Directed by and starring Sally Potter in a semi-autobiographical film about her relationship and tango lessons with co-star Pablo Veron, one of the world's hottest modern tango dancers. |
| Tango Mortale | (Film 1993) |
| Le Tango Des Rachevski | film de Sam Garbarski |
| Viva El Tango | Est Un Film De 26 Minutes Réalisé Par Pierre Lang Production Les productions Coriolis Scénario:Pierre Lang |
| Tango: The Obsession | Adam Boucheis' historical investigation into the power and mystery of tango. The documentary introduces tango dancers who range in age from 13 to 98, as well as musicians, poets and historians, all of whom convey the contagious, captivating and nurturing ability of the Argentine tango. |
| Tango Bar | directed by Marcos Zurinaga and starring Raul Julia, portrays the reunion and reminiscences of two popular cabaret/tango performers in Buenos Aires who have been separated for 11 years. Tango Bar makes reference to Carlos Gardel, the singer who was known as the tango king at the time of his death in an airplane crash in 1935. |
| Tangos: The Exile Of Gardel | Carlos Gardel appears briefly as a ghost in, Fernando E. Solanas' beautiful, free-form film focusing on a group of Argentinian performers and intellectuals in Paris forced to leave their homeland after the 1976 military coup. |
| The Story Of Vernon And Irene Castle | starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. This Hollywood classic of the life of the legendary dance team of the early 1900s, swept the United States and Europe before World War I and contains great dance numbers and lavish doses of elegance and charm. Irene Castle moved to Ithaca in 1916 to star in the silent film serial, Patria, and after her husband's death, married Robert E. Treman. The two resided in what is now the Sigma Chi fraternity house until 1923, when Castle left Ithaca. |
| Happy Together | Hong Kong director Wong Kar-Wai's latest film, starring Tony Leung Chiu-Wai and Leslie Cheung as two gay lovers from Hong Kong spending the last few months of British rule away from home -- in the tango bars of Buenos Aires |
|
Naked Tango |
Leonard Schrader An unhappy young bride married to an older man assumes the identity of a suicide victim whilst sailing from France to Argentina. She discovers that she is now an immigrant mail order bride promised to a brothel owner.... |
|
Tango Argentino |
Goran Paskaljevic Set in that brief golden bubble of time, between the fall of Communism in Yugoslavia, and the outbreak of the current bloody Civil War the movie was made almost entirely in Belgrade (now in Serbia). The film beautifully portrays the breakdown of one family, and the wondrous creation of a new one. Nikola finds a deep friendship with the spunky old Tango singer who refuses to "give in,"even though he's virtually bed-ridden. Nikola decides to simultaneously baby sit all of his elderly charges by bringing them together in a friendship club. Therein the magic of this film begins. Like nearly dry flowers in a spring rain, these wonderful old people "bloom" through friendship, romance, and a new-found sense of purpose. In a sense, each of Nikola's charges finds their own "tango," or dance of life. This is one film (should distribution occur) that you simply can not afford to miss viewing. |
| Scent Of A Woman | Cast: Al Pacino, Chris O'Donnell Director: Martin Brest Producer: Martin Brest |
Tango in the big screen
Argentine film industry was born around 1890, when tango was in its greatest expansion. Most of the films were about tango. The first one was "Tango argentino" ("Argentine tango"), which was filmed on 1897 and was even exhibited in Europe because of the great success it had in Argentina. The next tango film was produced in 1915 and was called "Nobleza gaucha" ("Gaucha nobleness"). It was about couples that danced milongas and tangos in Armenonville. The first Argentine spoken film was "Tango", produced in 1933. Some of the stars that participated in it were Tita Merello, "El Cachafaz", Mercedes Simone and Libertad Lamarque. The music of the film was provided by the orchestras of Maffia, Fresedo, Ponzio-Bazán, Donato and D'Arienzo. Some time later, biographic films about tango stars began to be filmed, such as "Mi noche triste" ("My sad night") about Pascual Contursi, in 1952. Homero Manzi was the writer behind many successful films of the time: "Su mejor alumno" ("His best student"), "La Guerra Gaucha" ("The Gaucha War") and "Pobre mi madre querida" ("My poor beloved mother"), among others. Carlos Gardel also participated in many films in the United States, such as "Melodía de arrabal" ("Arrabal melody"), "El tango en Broadway" ("Tango in Broadway") and "Luces de Buenos Aires" ("Lights of Buenos Aires").
Bu Siteyi Kullanarak "koşullarını" kabul etmektesiniz Copyright 2004 Son güncelleme: 10 Temmuz 2008