अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA disillusioned Englishman who goes to work in a school in a divided Argentina in 1976 finds his life transformed when he rescues an orphaned penguin from the beach.A disillusioned Englishman who goes to work in a school in a divided Argentina in 1976 finds his life transformed when he rescues an orphaned penguin from the beach.A disillusioned Englishman who goes to work in a school in a divided Argentina in 1976 finds his life transformed when he rescues an orphaned penguin from the beach.
Joaquín Lopez
- Víctor
- (as Joaquin Lopez Dominguez)
Nicanor Fernandez
- Igor
- (as Nicanor Fernández Montechiarini)
Micaela Breque
- Carina
- (as Mica Breque)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
The film told a very interesting story of life in Argentina after the coup in 1976. Many issues were covered in the film and we thought the film was fantastic. The whole cast was wonderful and we thought many of the supporting actors had especially strong roles - brilliantly peformed. As the main character, Steve Coogan was extremely funny, and sensitively played a cynical and jaded teacher. Coogan thoroughly deserved his Oscar nomination. Also, if there were Oscars for animals in films the penguin should won one. The film itself felt quite light-hearted and playful in overall tone but did a really good job portraying a very powerful story, worthy of Oscar nominations itself.
A distraught and antisocial teacher works his way down South America to Argentina. While the country is experiencing civil unrest, he takes an opportunity to go out and have fun. What was supposed to be a getaway ends up with him forced to keep a penguin. Little did he know that this penguin would change not only his life but the lives of everyone around him.
This movie adaptation of a memoir is inspired by actual events. The story is simple: Some friends come into our lives for just a season but leave a lasting impact. The movie has emotion, drama, comedy, and a penguin. Despite having a penguin, there is language and topics unsuitable for children. The one-hour and fifty-minute run time waddles by quickly. It is an entertaining watch for families with older children.
This movie adaptation of a memoir is inspired by actual events. The story is simple: Some friends come into our lives for just a season but leave a lasting impact. The movie has emotion, drama, comedy, and a penguin. Despite having a penguin, there is language and topics unsuitable for children. The one-hour and fifty-minute run time waddles by quickly. It is an entertaining watch for families with older children.
Steve Coogan plays a comically reprehensible and emotionally vacant man drifting through life. He lands in Argentina in 1976-just as the country edges into a military coup-and finds himself teaching English at a boys' school. Circumstances, both absurd and touching, lead him to reluctantly befriend a penguin.
This unlikely relationship sparks a journey of personal growth and rediscovery. Or at least, that's the idea.
Coogan's performance is both heartwarming and jarring, and I'm not sure if that tonal contradiction was intentional on director Peter Cattaneo's part or just the result of tonal whiplash. I wanted to like his character. I tried to root for him. But for some reason, I couldn't quite follow the arc of his redemption. While others in the film gradually warm to him, I remained stuck-still staring into the void of his character's emptiness.
Then there's the setting. Placing a penguin-centric personal redemption story in the middle of Argentina's 1976 coup feels... off. Historically accurate, yes. But I couldn't shake the sense that the filmmakers were using the backdrop of real political trauma as a kind of moral seasoning-maybe even a veiled commentary on today's geopolitical climate. Not inherently wrong, but the juxtaposition of soft-and-fuzzy personal growth with state-sponsored terror left me disoriented. In the end, I think the film's warm intentions got diluted by its ambitions.
This unlikely relationship sparks a journey of personal growth and rediscovery. Or at least, that's the idea.
Coogan's performance is both heartwarming and jarring, and I'm not sure if that tonal contradiction was intentional on director Peter Cattaneo's part or just the result of tonal whiplash. I wanted to like his character. I tried to root for him. But for some reason, I couldn't quite follow the arc of his redemption. While others in the film gradually warm to him, I remained stuck-still staring into the void of his character's emptiness.
Then there's the setting. Placing a penguin-centric personal redemption story in the middle of Argentina's 1976 coup feels... off. Historically accurate, yes. But I couldn't shake the sense that the filmmakers were using the backdrop of real political trauma as a kind of moral seasoning-maybe even a veiled commentary on today's geopolitical climate. Not inherently wrong, but the juxtaposition of soft-and-fuzzy personal growth with state-sponsored terror left me disoriented. In the end, I think the film's warm intentions got diluted by its ambitions.
My wife loves penguins. Any time there is a movie about penguins, I try to watch it with her. The fact that I ended up loving this particular movie so much was somewhat unexpected. So many things worked well. The balance of comedy and drama. The performances. The story arc. Definitely a "I laughed and I cried" sort of movie. And a quiet film overall. But I laughed harder than I thought I would, many times. Steve Coogan was perfectly cast as a cynical middle aged burned out teacher. The movie is really about him and less the penguin. It effectively does everything it means to do and I would happily see it again soon!
I will do my best to do this without spoilers, as it has not yet (I don't think) been released in the US. I saw this as a "sneak preview", so that is my assumption.
Had this not been a "blind" preview at my local theater (I have a movie subscription, so i see all my movies for "free") i would never have selected this movie for my watch list. But I'm glad i got to see it. (the chatter i heard from fellow viewers was the same - wouldn't have selected it, but glad I came).
The movie is set in 1976 Argentina, coinciding with the military coup that brought down Isabel Peron and began the plight of the "disappeared". While this is important in the events of the story, it is also peripheral.
The film is filled with closed off, broken people who are simply trying to live out their lives. Each of these people is changed by the penguin who unexpectedly comes into their lives. No, the penguin doesn't just fly in like an avian Mary Poppins. But is rescued by one of the characters who, through a series of misfortunes and miscalculations, ultimately adopts him.
The performances are mostly quiet, but not muted, and very good. Jonathan price settles into his role as the stodgy headmaster, not wanting to cause trouble or make waves, with the same intensity as his deceitful author/husband in "The Wife". Coogan is always good, charming in his discomfort with the world he travels through. But the penguin steals every scene he is in.
There are messages of standing for one's belief, the strength of faith, and shows how heartbreak can be uplifting, and tragedy can initiate joy.
No, this is not a movie that I would have gone to see (and i see everything) as the premise seems silly and slight on paper. But this was a worthwhile two hours. And while i left the theater in tears, i also somehow felt better about the world.
Had this not been a "blind" preview at my local theater (I have a movie subscription, so i see all my movies for "free") i would never have selected this movie for my watch list. But I'm glad i got to see it. (the chatter i heard from fellow viewers was the same - wouldn't have selected it, but glad I came).
The movie is set in 1976 Argentina, coinciding with the military coup that brought down Isabel Peron and began the plight of the "disappeared". While this is important in the events of the story, it is also peripheral.
The film is filled with closed off, broken people who are simply trying to live out their lives. Each of these people is changed by the penguin who unexpectedly comes into their lives. No, the penguin doesn't just fly in like an avian Mary Poppins. But is rescued by one of the characters who, through a series of misfortunes and miscalculations, ultimately adopts him.
The performances are mostly quiet, but not muted, and very good. Jonathan price settles into his role as the stodgy headmaster, not wanting to cause trouble or make waves, with the same intensity as his deceitful author/husband in "The Wife". Coogan is always good, charming in his discomfort with the world he travels through. But the penguin steals every scene he is in.
There are messages of standing for one's belief, the strength of faith, and shows how heartbreak can be uplifting, and tragedy can initiate joy.
No, this is not a movie that I would have gone to see (and i see everything) as the premise seems silly and slight on paper. But this was a worthwhile two hours. And while i left the theater in tears, i also somehow felt better about the world.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe actor Steve Coogan was 58 when he portrayed Tom Michell. In real life, Michell was only 23 when these events took place.
There is a story line about Tom's 13-year-old daughter, which was fabricated for the film. Interestingly, this isn't the first recent penguin film to use this plot device - the 2024 film "My Penguin Friend" also featured a protagonist whose child had died, using this as a way to explain the character's intense attachment to his animal companion.
The 19-year-old character Sofia is also a fictional creation of the film.
- गूफ़During the classroom lesson on Sea Fever, the protagonist Tom quotes the "freedom" yell from Braveheart, a film that would not be released for another 19 years.
- भाव
Tom Michell: The penguin is not a communist.
- कनेक्शनReferences Monty Python's Flying Circus (1969)
- साउंडट्रैकAvenida de las Camelias
Performed by Colegio Militar de la Nación Band
Courtesy of Tradition Records and Naxos
By arrangement with Source/Q
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषाएं
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Lo que aprendí de mi pingüino
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Canary Islands, स्पेन(Buenos Aires)
- उत्पादन कंपनियां
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
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- 30 मार्च 2025
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