Moebius
- 1996
- 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
A train on the Buenos Aires subway system suddenly vanishes.A train on the Buenos Aires subway system suddenly vanishes.A train on the Buenos Aires subway system suddenly vanishes.
- Awards
- 7 wins & 5 nominations total
Annabella Levy
- Abril
- (as Anabella Levy)
Daniel Di Biase
- Kenn
- (as Daniel Dibiase)
Nora Zinski
- Profesora
- (as Nora Zinsky)
Rodolfo Franghi
- Mussio
- (as Rodolfo Franggi)
Featured reviews
Moebius is an example of what you can do with a low-budget (less than 250,000 $) film. It´s a great movie made by the students of the Universidad del Cine. I think it´s great for some reasons: first because these students had the courage to shot a sci-fi movie in Argentina, that involves many risks, such as never be shown in any cinema, or never finishing it because of subsidy problems (in my country these ones go to the titles that are seen by the major quantity of people, and not to the ones that are better). Second, because the plot makes you stay until the end of the movie and it´s one of the most original plots I´ve ever seen. Finally, because it´s not an improvised film; all the details of it were revised very carefully, and I can´t see any technical errors (that are common in other low-budget movies). I rate Moebius with an 8 out of 10.
10lachacha
Perfectly balanced , well directed , great cast. A must see. A true example of what can be found beyond main stream. A psych-suspense , almost thriller like script , that leaves the viewer the choice of building his own barrier , at the point where each of us believes fiction ends and reality starts and vice versa. It takes place in Buenos Aires , but it's NOT local at all ,but rather Universal , it could be happening anywhere in the world . Extremely believable , tension increases as the story develops .It's refreshing to learn that this movie was made with only 3% of the average cost of a Hollywood production . Another indisputable proof that Talent is enough , regardless of the amounts of cash available to expend. Watch it , it worths every inch of celluloid , and every minute of your time
As every math undergraduate knows, a Möbius (or Moebious) strip is made as follows. You take a paper strip and glue the ends together; before gluing you rotate one of the ends hy 180 degrees. The Möbius strip has some intriguing properties. Imagine two ants standing at a point of the surface. The first walks along the strip while the second stays in place. Eventually, the first ant will reach the starting point but on the other side of the surface, thus it wiii be invisible to the second ant. This is the origin of the script; only, instead of an ant we have a subway train circulating on rails that sit on a Möbius strip or some higher dimensional version thereof.
Out of this bit of geometry and some cinematic phantasy, director Gustavo Mosquera R. (the R stands for Roral) and his scriptwriters have assembled a taut science fiction film that, unlike others of the genre, does not require excessive doses of suspension of disbelief. The scenario is the Buenos Aires subway system and much of the action happens in its vast, labyrinthine tunnels, underground galleries and workshops that at times seem to represent the Underworld, the kingdom of Hades of Greek mythology.
The Universidad Nacional del Cine (National University of Cinema), founded in 1991 in Buenos Aires teaches every artistic and technical aspect of making movies. It has has been responsible for (and financed) several major projects, this movie being the first. Director Mosquera, a professor at the University enlisted a group of more than forty students that were divided into teams (direction, production, script, art, cinematography, montage, sound) and were instrumental n all aspects of the making of the movie. It was filmed in actual, old fashioned stock and resulted in a very polished product which has attained international recognition (e. G. the MoMA festival New Directors, New Film in 1997) and has already had a remake, Moebius 17 (2005). Perhaps the disappearing train (and the authorities pretending it never happened) is an allegory for the many Argentines disappeared during the military dictatorship of 1976 - 1982.
Out of this bit of geometry and some cinematic phantasy, director Gustavo Mosquera R. (the R stands for Roral) and his scriptwriters have assembled a taut science fiction film that, unlike others of the genre, does not require excessive doses of suspension of disbelief. The scenario is the Buenos Aires subway system and much of the action happens in its vast, labyrinthine tunnels, underground galleries and workshops that at times seem to represent the Underworld, the kingdom of Hades of Greek mythology.
The Universidad Nacional del Cine (National University of Cinema), founded in 1991 in Buenos Aires teaches every artistic and technical aspect of making movies. It has has been responsible for (and financed) several major projects, this movie being the first. Director Mosquera, a professor at the University enlisted a group of more than forty students that were divided into teams (direction, production, script, art, cinematography, montage, sound) and were instrumental n all aspects of the making of the movie. It was filmed in actual, old fashioned stock and resulted in a very polished product which has attained international recognition (e. G. the MoMA festival New Directors, New Film in 1997) and has already had a remake, Moebius 17 (2005). Perhaps the disappearing train (and the authorities pretending it never happened) is an allegory for the many Argentines disappeared during the military dictatorship of 1976 - 1982.
I know I enjoyed this when it first came out, but I had entirely forgotten how well-made it is. In the screenwriter's own words, "Moebius" is the perfect machine. The light! The colors! The tracking shots! The sound design! The director general's giant glass-topped table! Combined with the bold proposition of an architect chasing a wayward train lost in the underground maze that is the subway system of Buenos Aires, the director's attention to detail makes for a holistically surreal experience. One guy who's sure to give you the creeps is the ancient, wailing lift boy taking our hero, Daniel Pratt, down to the university basement. Needless to say, the basement doubles as a subway station. On a forgotten line. Heading nowhere. As Pratt says, it's a strange game. Now Annabel Levy, in the part of his preteen sidekick Abril, I wonder what she's up to these days. It seems she hasn't made a movie since. Chances are she disappeared from the set, never to be met with again. What a shame.
First I have to say, this movie is been done by the students of Buenos Aires School of Cinema, so it's a great job accomplished!
Firs thing that strikes is the dense atmosphere, the cinematography is amazing, I absolutely loved it.
The characters are mostly well performed, but there are some weird inconsistencies (mainly in Prat, the main character) that took me a bit off the atmosphere I mentioned before.
The story is quite interesting and original, and it has a lot of potential, but it felt rushed on it's ending, leaving me wanting more to happen and a better use of the main idea...
Overall it's an enjoyable movie, not too long and beautifully filmed, big thumbs up for those students! I'll check out their other works, since I'm watching this movie 24 years after it's been done ':D
Did you know
- TriviaThis film was shot in the subways stations of Buenos Aires.
- GoofsWhen Pratt is running from the train, the shape of the tunnel changes from one shot to the next.
- ConnectionsRemade as Moebius 17 (2005)
- How long is Moebius?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $250,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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