VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,4/10
1862
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Un dramma omoerotico ambientato negli anni '70 ispirato a un romanzo che segue le esperienze sessuali, spesso violente e infine omicide del narcisista ventenne Jaime.Un dramma omoerotico ambientato negli anni '70 ispirato a un romanzo che segue le esperienze sessuali, spesso violente e infine omicide del narcisista ventenne Jaime.Un dramma omoerotico ambientato negli anni '70 ispirato a un romanzo che segue le esperienze sessuali, spesso violente e infine omicide del narcisista ventenne Jaime.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 3 vittorie e 12 candidature totali
Lux Pascal
- Danny El Rucio
- (as a different name)
Carlos Corales
- Don Roberto
- (as Juan Carlos Corales)
Recensioni in evidenza
Pedestrian adaptation of the only novel written by Mario Cruz, a little-known work from the 1970s (which I don't know, so I cannot talk about it). The result is a melodrama of sex between inmates, with clichéd situations and lots of nudity, sodomy and erections, and with allusions to the days of Salvador Allende, just because: you just change the bell-bottoms and it can be anytime, anywhere.
The worst is the ill-advised choice of Alfredo Castro as The Stallion, who changes partners at his whim and seduces the young inmate that has just arrived in his cell. Castro is a good actor... but a "stallion"...? It would have been more convincing if the character's name was "Old Goat". Gastón Pauls would have seem a better choice for the role.
P. S. The film includes the last film performance by the beautiful Lucas Balmaceda as El Rucio, before becoming Lux Pascal, equally pretty.
The worst is the ill-advised choice of Alfredo Castro as The Stallion, who changes partners at his whim and seduces the young inmate that has just arrived in his cell. Castro is a good actor... but a "stallion"...? It would have been more convincing if the character's name was "Old Goat". Gastón Pauls would have seem a better choice for the role.
P. S. The film includes the last film performance by the beautiful Lucas Balmaceda as El Rucio, before becoming Lux Pascal, equally pretty.
When Jaime kills his best friend (who he lusted after) in a fit of rage, he is sent to a prison which was terrible in its own right. Placed in a cell with four others, he is forced to sleep with the Stallion (who is the boss in this cell and who tied to the most powerful prisoner in the place) Forced sex happens in this prison so is accepted. Now called the Prince he slowly changes over time to become very strong. The deleted scenes are very explicit. Life goes on even if in prison.
"The Prince" (El Príncipe) is a Chilean prison drama by Sebastián Muñoz. 2019.
Leone Queer, Venice Film Festival, 2019.
Chile, 1970.
While outside this Chilean prison in the 1970s, when Salvador Allende's government was about to take office, heterosexuality was mandatory, in the prison described here, the exact opposite is true: between Jaime and El Potro, a "black" love relationship develops, as they called it in prisons at the time. Once he becomes El Príncipe, Jaime discovers that prison is a world based on power relations but also on tenderness and loyalty.
Paradoxically, the confinement and the surrounding homoeroticism allow him to reveal himself despite the stifling violence. He will experience the love he was unable to experience in freedom.
It's therefore a love melodrama set in a prison setting, but a story of strong men that shows the rise of a man in love with himself, empty and wild, capable of dragging others into his self-idolatry.
In this place cut off from the rest of the world, love and death resonate like tangos and guitars.
Passion, where homosexuality isn't even an option, is a way of life, full of skin, fears, and pain. The law of the strongest prevails between grunts and strong embraces and whispers that pass from mouth to mouth.
Some critics mention the director's excessive depiction of homosexual relationships, masturbation, and male genitalia. This choice is influenced by the tone and the narrative. They are not gratuitous: the three sex scenes illustrate important aspects of the story.
A prison story for very macho males who purr like cats. It's reminiscent of Querelle.
The director, whose debut film this is, has a long career as an art director, and it's evident from the very first shot: a pool of blood flowing from a severed neck, which we follow all the way to the killer's shoes.
The narrative perspective is interesting: prison drama is already abundantly represented in cinema, so why not give someone the freedom to focus on other human facets of what can happen there?
The pace is brisk, and the performances could make many Oscar winners jealous.
The ending, which some consider predictable, is simply coherent.
A violent and brutal coming-of-age story.
Good cinema.
#henrimesquida #gaycinemaandliterature.
Leone Queer, Venice Film Festival, 2019.
Chile, 1970.
While outside this Chilean prison in the 1970s, when Salvador Allende's government was about to take office, heterosexuality was mandatory, in the prison described here, the exact opposite is true: between Jaime and El Potro, a "black" love relationship develops, as they called it in prisons at the time. Once he becomes El Príncipe, Jaime discovers that prison is a world based on power relations but also on tenderness and loyalty.
Paradoxically, the confinement and the surrounding homoeroticism allow him to reveal himself despite the stifling violence. He will experience the love he was unable to experience in freedom.
It's therefore a love melodrama set in a prison setting, but a story of strong men that shows the rise of a man in love with himself, empty and wild, capable of dragging others into his self-idolatry.
In this place cut off from the rest of the world, love and death resonate like tangos and guitars.
Passion, where homosexuality isn't even an option, is a way of life, full of skin, fears, and pain. The law of the strongest prevails between grunts and strong embraces and whispers that pass from mouth to mouth.
Some critics mention the director's excessive depiction of homosexual relationships, masturbation, and male genitalia. This choice is influenced by the tone and the narrative. They are not gratuitous: the three sex scenes illustrate important aspects of the story.
A prison story for very macho males who purr like cats. It's reminiscent of Querelle.
The director, whose debut film this is, has a long career as an art director, and it's evident from the very first shot: a pool of blood flowing from a severed neck, which we follow all the way to the killer's shoes.
The narrative perspective is interesting: prison drama is already abundantly represented in cinema, so why not give someone the freedom to focus on other human facets of what can happen there?
The pace is brisk, and the performances could make many Oscar winners jealous.
The ending, which some consider predictable, is simply coherent.
A violent and brutal coming-of-age story.
Good cinema.
#henrimesquida #gaycinemaandliterature.
This movie is powerful and just brings you everything from tears and heartbreak to some serious wish fulfillment. Showing people who aren't 'good' by anyone's standards, but a real insight into the way crimes come from a place of pain and feeling like you're the only one alone and not accepted.
I didn't expect too much, I thought (with some wishful thinking, I admit!) that this would be some flimsy soft-erotic gay prison thing. But to my surprise it turned out to be more serious than that, providing an actually involving story of a young guy who lands in a Chilean prison somewhere in the 70's during the Allende regime (I didn't feel by the way that this setting added anything substantial to the premise) and as a newbie is confronted with the existing prison rules and culture, especially with the sexual aspects of it. He gets sexually and emotionally involved with an older inmate, with all kinds of positive and negative consequences.
The biggest part of the movie is set in the prison, and this convinces the most. The smaller part (by way of flash-backs) in which we see how young Jaime came to commit the crime for which he was incarcerated, is rather fragmentary and felt a bit rushed. It leaves Jaime's background almost totally blank, so his sudden outburst into a jealous rage comes totally out of the blue.
Although there isn't happening that much (there's a lot more action in every single episode of Oz!), you keep being interested in how things will evolve. Apart from one pivotal incident towards the end of the movie, there's hardly any violence between all the inmates, but instead of that a surprising amount of intimacy and emotionally caring for each other. Touchingly illustrated when all inmates respectfully come to offer their condolences to Jaime when his protector and lover is killed.
There is a fair amount of very graphic gay sex, but I guess you could call it functional in this specific story. Still praise to the actors who had the courage to participate, it cannot have been easy.
Apart from the earlier mentioned flaws, I do have some other to mention. The leader inmate is called The Stud, but it is hard to relate that nickname to the middle-aged and rather frail looking actor Alfredo Castro. And biggest let-down to me was the way main character Jaime (The Prince) was played by Juan Carlos Maldonado. He mostly acted like an autistic nerd, walking and talking like a robot, being reasonably good-looking but for the rest totally uncharismatic and never (at least in my opinion) deserving that illuster nickname The Prince.
The biggest part of the movie is set in the prison, and this convinces the most. The smaller part (by way of flash-backs) in which we see how young Jaime came to commit the crime for which he was incarcerated, is rather fragmentary and felt a bit rushed. It leaves Jaime's background almost totally blank, so his sudden outburst into a jealous rage comes totally out of the blue.
Although there isn't happening that much (there's a lot more action in every single episode of Oz!), you keep being interested in how things will evolve. Apart from one pivotal incident towards the end of the movie, there's hardly any violence between all the inmates, but instead of that a surprising amount of intimacy and emotionally caring for each other. Touchingly illustrated when all inmates respectfully come to offer their condolences to Jaime when his protector and lover is killed.
There is a fair amount of very graphic gay sex, but I guess you could call it functional in this specific story. Still praise to the actors who had the courage to participate, it cannot have been easy.
Apart from the earlier mentioned flaws, I do have some other to mention. The leader inmate is called The Stud, but it is hard to relate that nickname to the middle-aged and rather frail looking actor Alfredo Castro. And biggest let-down to me was the way main character Jaime (The Prince) was played by Juan Carlos Maldonado. He mostly acted like an autistic nerd, walking and talking like a robot, being reasonably good-looking but for the rest totally uncharismatic and never (at least in my opinion) deserving that illuster nickname The Prince.
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 663 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 36 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1
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