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#Carlos Defeo
genevieveetguy · 1 year
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Zama, Lucrecia Martel (2017)
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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Daniel Giménez Cacho in Zama (Lucrecia Martel, 2017) Cast: Daniel Giménez Cacho, Lola Dueñas, Matheus Nachtergaele, Juan Minujín, Nahuel Cano, Mariana Nunes, Carlos Defeo, Rafael Spregelburd. Screenplay: Lucrecia Martel, based on a novel by Antonio Di Benedetto. Cinematography: Rui Poças. Art direction: Renata Pinheiro. Film editing: Karen Harley, Miguel Schverdfinger In her New York Times review of Lucrecia Martel's Zama, Manohla Dargis suggests that we should see the film, then read the novel by Antonio Di Benedetto, and then see the film again. That's a little more work than many of us are prepared to put into our movies, but it gets at one central fact about Zama: It's a brilliant movie, but appreciating it -- perhaps even comprehending it -- demands a viewer's attention. Just figuring out who Zama is takes a little effort: When we first see him he's striking a kind of heroic pose on the seashore, but his life is anything but heroic. Don Diego de Zama is a magistrate in a backwater of the 18th-century Spanish colonial empire, somewhere in Argentina. The place is a kind of hell-hole, the sort of colony where the settlers constantly badger the officials for help in getting native laborers, the ones they once had having either escaped or died from overwork. Zama wants to escape, too, to return to his wife and children, or at least to be transferred to a better place, but bureaucracy stymies him constantly. Eventually, he agrees to go on an expedition to capture a notorious bandit, but that doesn't end well. It's a scathing, often funny, eventually tragic portrayal of colonialism, and Martel is unwilling to let Zama's story take a predictable course. The land, the New World environment, is too much for the people trying to tame it. The randomness of existence in this outpost is captured by a beautifully absurd moment when Zama is trying to deal with a recalcitrant superior and a llama wanders into the frame, peering with a blankly benign gaze over Zama's shoulder, mocking his serious mien. Rui Poças's cinematography superbly captures both the beauty and cruelty of this inhuman landscape.
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CALIFICACIÓN PERSONAL: 7 / 10
Título Original: Cartero
Año: 2019
Duración: 80 min
País: Argentina
Dirección: Emiliano Serra
Guion: Santiago Hadida
Música: Gustavo Santaolalla
Fotografía: Manuel Rebela
Reparto: Tomas Raimondi, Germán de Silva, Macarena Suárez, Jorge Sesán, Carlos Defeo, Edda Bustamante
Productora: Sombracine
Género: Drama
TRAILER:
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zooterchet · 1 year
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Act of Man Charges (Public Spies Tribunals) (Pre-Law Vigilantism)
Machinegun Johnny: Taiwanese Navy.
John Wayne Gacy: FBI.
Ted Bundy: French ExSec.
Jeffrey Dahmer: US Army.
Charles Manson: British SAS.
Albert Fish: Banking Association.
Bugs Moran: United States Marine Corps.
Richard Ramirez: CIA.
George Jung: Canadian Mounted Patrol.
Marshall Applewhite: Sicilian Carabinieri.
Eileen Wournos: Fugitive Slave Act.
Pretty Boy Floyd: Narcotics Bureau.
OJ Simpson: Illuminati.
Hunter S. Thompson: United States Air Force.
Carlos the Jackal: Colombian Army.
Lee Harvey Oswald: Mossad.
John Wilkes Booth: MI-6.
Richard Lawrence: Presidential Freemasonic Society.
Albert DeSilva: DC Comics.
Michael DeFeo: NYPD.
Stan Lee: Haganah.
Richard Kulinski: Red Cross.
Ted Kaczynski: United Nations.
John Gotti: KGB.
Whitey Bulger: SDF.
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lafamamusic · 3 years
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Un tiktoker visitó la tenebrosa casa en Amityville y narró lo que vió
Un tiktoker visitó la tenebrosa casa en Amityville y narró lo que vió
En 1974 Ronald DeFeo asesinó a sus padres y 4 hermanos en esta casa de Amityville, Nueva York. Foto: paul hawthorne / Getty Images El tiktoker Carlos Name sigue recorriendo propiedades con historias bastante terroríficas detrás. Recientemente publicó en TikTok un video en el que muestra y explica un poco sobre la casa en Amityville, Nueva York. Esta caso fue testigo de uno de los crímenes más…
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brookstonalmanac · 5 years
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Events 11.13
1002 – English king Æthelred II orders the killing of all Danes in England, known today as the St. Brice's Day massacre. 1093 – Battle of Alnwick: in an English victory over the Scots, Malcolm III of Scotland, and his son Edward, are killed. 1160 – Louis VII of France marries Adela of Champagne. 1642 – First English Civil War: Battle of Turnham Green: The Royalist forces withdraw in the face of the Parliamentarian army and fail to take London. 1775 – American Revolutionary War: Patriot revolutionary forces under Gen. Richard Montgomery occupy Montreal. 1841 – James Braid first sees a demonstration of animal magnetism, which leads to his study of the subject he eventually calls hypnotism. 1851 – The Denny Party lands at Alki Point, before moving to the other side of Elliott Bay to what would become Seattle. 1887 – Bloody Sunday clashes in central London. 1901 – The 1901 Caister lifeboat disaster. 1914 – Zaian War: Berber tribesmen inflict the heaviest defeat of French forces in Morocco at the Battle of El Herri. 1916 – World War I: Prime Minister of Australia Billy Hughes is expelled from the Labor Party over his support for conscription. 1918 – World War I: Allied troops occupy Constantinople, the capital of the Ottoman Empire. 1927 – The Holland Tunnel opens to traffic as the first Hudson River vehicle tunnel linking New Jersey to New York City. 1940 – Walt Disney's animated musical film Fantasia is first released, on the first night of a roadshow at New York's Broadway Theatre. 1941 – World War II: The aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal is torpedoed by U-81, sinking the following day. 1942 – World War II: Naval Battle of Guadalcanal: U.S. and Japanese ships engage in an intense, close-quarters surface naval engagement during the Guadalcanal Campaign. 1947 – The Soviet Union completes development of the AK-47, one of the first proper assault rifles. 1950 – General Carlos Delgado Chalbaud, President of Venezuela, is assassinated in Caracas. 1954 – Great Britain defeats France to capture the first ever Rugby League World Cup in Paris in front of around 30,000 spectators. 1956 – The Supreme Court of the United States declares Alabama laws requiring segregated buses illegal, thus ending the Montgomery Bus Boycott. 1966 – In response to Fatah raids against Israelis near the West Bank border, Israel launches an attack on the village of As-Samu. 1969 – Vietnam War: Anti-war protesters in Washington, D.C. stage a symbolic March Against Death. 1970 – Bhola cyclone: A 150-mph tropical cyclone hits the densely populated Ganges Delta region of East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), killing an estimated 500,000 people in one night. 1974 – Ronald DeFeo, Jr. murders his entire family in Amityville, Long Island in the house that would become known as The Amityville Horror. 1982 – Ray Mancini defeats Duk Koo Kim in a boxing match held in Las Vegas. Kim's subsequent death (on November 17) leads to significant changes in the sport. 1982 – The Vietnam Veterans Memorial is dedicated in Washington, D.C. after a march to its site by thousands of Vietnam War veterans. 1985 – The volcano Nevado del Ruiz erupts and melts a glacier, causing a lahar (volcanic mudslide) that buries Armero, Colombia, killing approximately 23,000 people. 1985 – Xavier Suárez is sworn in as Miami's first Cuban-born mayor. 1986 – The Compact of Free Association becomes law, granting the Federated States of Micronesia and the Marshall Islands independence from the United States. 1989 – Hans-Adam II, the present Prince of Liechtenstein, begins his reign on the death of his father. 1990 – In Aramoana, New Zealand, David Gray shoots dead 13 people in a massacre before being tracked down and killed by police the next day. 1992 – The High Court of Australia rules in Dietrich v The Queen that although there is no absolute right to have publicly funded counsel, in most circumstances a judge should grant any request for an adjournment or stay when an accused is unrepresented. 1994 – In a referendum, voters in Sweden decide to join the European Union. 1995 – A truck-bomb explodes outside of a US-operated Saudi Arabian National Guard training center in Riyadh, killing five Americans and two Indians. A group called the Islamic Movement for Change claims responsibility. 2000 – Philippine House Speaker Manny Villar passes the articles of impeachment against Philippine President Joseph Estrada. 2001 – War on Terror: In the first such act since World War II, US President George W. Bush signs an executive order allowing military tribunals against foreigners suspected of connections to terrorist acts or planned acts on the United States. 2002 – Iraq disarmament crisis: Iraq agrees to the terms of the UN Security Council Resolution 1441. 2002 – During the Prestige oil spill a storm burst a tank of the oil tanker MV Prestige which was not allowed to dock and sank on November 19, 2002 off the coast of Galicia, spilling 63,000 metric tons of heavy fuel oil, more than the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill. 2012 – A total solar eclipse occurred in parts of Australia and the South Pacific 2013 – Hawaii legalizes same sex marriage. 2013 – 4 World Trade Center officially opens. 2015 – A set of coordinated terror attacks in Paris, including multiple shootings, explosions, and a hostage crisis in the 10th and 11th arrondissements kill 130 people, seven attackers, and injured 368 others, with at least 80 critically wounded. 2015 – WT1190F, a temporary satellite of Earth, impacts just southeast of Sri Lanka.
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showsargentinos · 7 years
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Publicado en https://goo.gl/w5CoZF
PREMIOS MARIA GUERRERO: LOS NOMINADOS SON
Se dieron a conocer los nominados del reconocimiento de la Asociación de Amigos del Teatro Cervantes a las obras de este año. La ceremonia se realizará en 2018. El jurado del Premio María Guerrero, que otorga la Asociación Amigos del Teatro Cervantes-Teatro Nacional Argentino, definió las ternas en los rubros artísticos de los espectáculos de la temporada 2017. La ceremonia será el año próximo y en ese marco se entregarán Menciones especiales a César Brie, a Hernán Matorra y Santiago Otero Ramos, y a Juan Rodó. Los premios a la Trayectoria serán para Graciela Dufau y para Manuel Iedvabni; y la distinción especial Lydé Lisant para el Grupo de Titiriteros del Teatro San Martín, por sus 40º años de actividad. A continuación las nominaciones: ACTRIZ PROTAGÓNICA Raquel Ameri (Millones de segundos, de Diego Casado Rubio) Luisa Kuliok (Juegos de amor y de guerra, de Gonzalo Demaría) Lorena Vega (Yo, Encarnación Ezcurra, de Cristina Escofet) ACTOR PROTAGÓNICO Hugo Arana (Todas las rayuelas, de Carlos La Casa) Luis Machín (I.D.I.O.T.A. de Jordi Casanovas / El mar de noche, de Santiago Loza) Miguel Ángel Solá (Doble o nada, de Sabina Bergman) ACTRIZ DE REPARTO Ana María Castel (El padre, de Strindberg) Susana Lanteri (La herencia de Eszter, de Sándor Márai) Lorena Szekely (Abandonemos toda esperanza, sobre textos de Florencio Sánchez) ACTOR DE REPARTO Marcelo Bucossi (Abandonemos toda esperanza) Alfredo Castelani (Edipo, de Sófocles) Carlos Defeo (Eva Perón/El homosexual o la dificultad de expresarse, de Copi) Sebastián Holz (Juegos de amor y de guerra, de Gonzalo Demaría) MEJOR DIRECCIÓN Pompeyo Audivert (La farsa de los ausentes, de Roberto Arlt) Alfredo Martín (Abandonemos toda esperanza) Marcelo Velázquez (El padre, de A. Strindberg) AUTOR ARGENTINO Gonzalo Demaría (Juegos de amor y de guerra) Cristina Escofet (Yo, Encarnación Ezcurra) Belén Pascualini (Christiane. Un Bio-musical Científico) ESCENOGRAFÍA Magali Acha (Bajo el bosque de leche, de Dylan Thomas) Norberto Laino (La farsa de los ausentes) Ariel Vaccaro (El padre, de Strindberg) ILUMINACIÓN Omar Pacheco (Dashua, de Omar Pacheco) Leandra Rodríguez (Juegos de amor y de guerra, de Gonzalo Demaría) David Seldes (La madre del desierto, de Nacho Bartolone) VESTUARIO Adriana Dicaprio (Yo, Encarnación Ezcurra, de Cristina Escofet) Jessica Menéndez (Abandonemos toda esperanza) Julio Suárez (La farsa de los ausentes) Mini Zuccheri (juegos de amor y de guerra) MÚSICA Patricia Casares (Parias, de Guillermo Cacace y Juan Ignacio Fernández sobre textos de Chéjov) Franco Calluso (La madre del desierto, de Nacho Bartolone) Agustín Flores Muñoz, Sebastián Guevara y Malena Zuelgaray (Yo, Encarnación Ezcurra) REVELACIÓN Inés Efrón (Arde brillante en los bosques de la noche, de Mariano Pensotti) Lucía Arias (Diarios de 15, de Ana Alvarado - Cía. de Titiriteros Centro de las Artes, UNSAM) Pablo Maidana (Diarios de 15, de Ana Alvarado - Cía. de Titiriteros Centro de las Artes, UNSAM) Por último, el jurado de los María Guerrero estuvo integrado por Rosa Celentano, Jorge Lafauci, Carlos Llorens -también coordinador del Premio-, Luis Mazas, Linda Máximo, Mónica Ottino, Jorge Pacini (Cancillería Argentina), Ana Seoane y Rosa Vita Pelegrín (Artes Escénicas y Cine - Oficina Cultural- Embajada de España).
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segundoenfoque1 · 7 years
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Benjamín Vicuña representará a Evita en obra teatral
El actor chileno se pondrá en la piel de una de las mujeres más emblemáticas de la política mundial
Benjamín Vicuña fue elegido para participar de una obra que seguramente levantará críticas y polémicas. El director argentino de teatro Marcial Di Fonzo Bo lo contrató para actuar en su nueva obra: “Eva Perón y El homosexual o la dificultad de expresarse”, que produce junto al dramaturgo Raúl Damonte Botana.
En el elenco participarán Carlos Defeo, Rodolfo De Souza, Juan Gil Navarro, Hernán Franco, Rosario Varela. Y por supuesto, Vicuña a quien le toca el rol de nada más ni nada menos que Maria Eva Duarte de Perón.  
Si bien toda producción – audiovisual o teatral – que incluye la vida de Evita es sinónimo de éxito, en este caso podría parecer lo contrario. Por más buenos que sean los directores, es evidente que la polémica no pasará desapercibida ya que es la primera vez que la primera dama (ex esposa del fallecido presidente Juan Domingo Perón) será representada por una figura de sexo masculino. Y no sólo eso, sino que también entra en juego el hecho de que el actor es de nacionalidad chilena. Algo que a los argentinos, y más a los peronistas, no les hará mucha gracia.
En declaraciones para el sitio ciudad.com, Vicuña expresó: “El arte tiene que estar ligado a lo político, a lo social. Pero, a su vez, debe ser autónomo, fuerte. Hay algo poderoso en la libertad absoluta que tiene Copi. No soy ingenuo en relación con la historia de la Argentina, del peronismo, la de los últimos años, ahora, los K, pero eso me da más libertad de vuelo, más autonomía. El teatro puede ayudar a la gente a pensar. La última impresión que tuve en febrero de Bs. As. de una ciudad vacía, e imágenes muy fuertes en la calle, que me llevaron años atrás; me dio miedo, ví mucha miseria. Es un problema mundial también, de decisiones políticas neoliberales fuertísimas”.
La obra tendrá una temporada breve en Buenos Aires (hasta septiembre), dado que luego está prevista una gira por Bordeaux, Maubeuge, Nancy, Lyon, y un final en Nîmes, al término de noviembre, más allá de una posible otra gira por España.
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brookstonalmanac · 7 years
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Events 11.13
1002 – English king Æthelred II orders the killing of all Danes in England, known today as the St. Brice's Day massacre. 1093 – Battle of Alnwick English victory over the Scots, Malcolm III of Scotland, and his son Edward, are slain. 1160 – Louis VII of France marries Adela of Champagne. 1642 – First English Civil War: Battle of Turnham Green: The Royalist forces withdraw in the face of the Parliamentarian army and fail to take London. 1775 – American Revolutionary War: Patriot revolutionary forces under Gen. Richard Montgomery occupy Montreal. 1841 – James Braid first sees a demonstration of animal magnetism, which leads to his study of the subject he eventually calls hypnotism. 1851 – The Denny Party lands at Alki Point, before moving to the other side of Elliott Bay to what would become Seattle. 1887 – Bloody Sunday clashes in central London. 1901 – The 1901 Caister Lifeboat Disaster. 1914 – Zaian War: Berber tribesmen inflict the heaviest defeat of French forces in Morocco at the Battle of El Herri. 1916 – Prime Minister of Australia Billy Hughes is expelled from the Labor Party over his support for conscription. 1918 – Allied troops occupy Constantinople, the capital of the Ottoman Empire. 1927 – The Holland Tunnel opens to traffic as the first Hudson River vehicle tunnel linking New Jersey to New York City. 1940 – Walt Disney's animated musical film Fantasia is first released, on the first night of a roadshow at New York's Broadway Theatre. 1941 – World War II: The aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal is torpedoed by U-81, sinking the following day. 1942 – World War II: Naval Battle of Guadalcanal: U.S. and Japanese ships engage in an intense, close-quarters surface naval engagement during the Guadalcanal Campaign. 1947 – The Soviet Union completes development of the AK-47, one of the first proper assault rifles. 1950 – General Carlos Delgado Chalbaud, President of Venezuela, is assassinated in Caracas. 1954 – Great Britain defeats France to capture the first ever Rugby League World Cup in Paris in front of around 30,000 spectators. 1956 – The Supreme Court of the United States declares Alabama laws requiring segregated buses illegal, thus ending the Montgomery Bus Boycott. 1966 – In response to Fatah raids against Israelis near the West Bank border, Israel launches an attack on the village of As-Samu. 1969 – Vietnam War: Anti-war protesters in Washington, D.C. stage a symbolic March Against Death. 1970 – Bhola cyclone: A 150-mph tropical cyclone hits the densely populated Ganges Delta region of East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), killing an estimated 500,000 people in one night. 1974 – Ronald DeFeo, Jr. murders his entire family in Amityville, Long Island in the house that would become known as The Amityville Horror. 1982 – Ray Mancini defeats Duk Koo Kim in a boxing match held in Las Vegas. Kim's subsequent death (on November 17) leads to significant changes in the sport. 1982 – The Vietnam Veterans Memorial is dedicated in Washington, D.C. after a march to its site by thousands of Vietnam War veterans. 1985 – The volcano Nevado del Ruiz erupts and melts a glacier, causing a lahar (volcanic mudslide) that buries Armero, Colombia, killing approximately 23,000 people. 1985 – Xavier Suárez is sworn in as Miami's first Cuban-born mayor. 1986 – The Compact of Free Association becomes law, granting the Federated States of Micronesia, the Marshall Islands independence from the United States. 1989 – Hans-Adam II, the present Prince of Liechtenstein, begins his reign on the death of his father. 1990 – In Aramoana, New Zealand, David Gray shoots dead 13 people in a massacre before being tracked down and killed by police the next day. 1992 – The High Court of Australia rules in Dietrich v The Queen that although there is no absolute right to have publicly funded counsel, in most circumstances a judge should grant any request for an adjournment or stay when an accused is unrepresented. 1994 – In a referendum, voters in Sweden decide to join the European Union. 1995 – A truck-bomb explodes outside of a US-operated Saudi Arabian National Guard training center in Riyadh, killing five Americans and two Indians. A group called the Islamic Movement for Change claims responsibility. 2000 – Philippine House Speaker Manny Villar passes the articles of impeachment against Philippine President Joseph Estrada. 2001 – War on Terror: In the first such act since World War II, US President George W. Bush signs an executive order allowing military tribunals against foreigners suspected of connections to terrorist acts or planned acts on the United States. 2002 – Iraq disarmament crisis: Iraq agrees to the terms of the UN Security Council Resolution 1441. 2002 – During the Prestige oil spill a storm burst a tank of the oil tanker MV Prestige which was not allowed to dock and sank on November 19, 2002 off the coast of Galicia, spilling 63,000 metric tons of heavy fuel oil, more than the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill. 2011 – Mario Monti accepted to become the 54th Prime Minister of Italy with the ouster of Silvio Berlusconi, who failed to tackle Italy's debt crisis. 2012 – A total solar eclipse occurred in parts of Australia and the South Pacific 2015 – A set of coordinated terror attacks in Paris, including multiple shootings, explosions, and a hostage crisis in the 10th and 11th arrondissements kill 130 people, seven attackers, and injured 368 others, with at least 80 critically wounded. 2015 – WT1190F, a temporary satellite of Earth, impacts just southeast of Sri Lanka.
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