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Pablo Larraín (Chile 2008)
In Santiago de Chile, 1978, Pinochet’s dictatorship has Chilean citizens coping with a nightly curfew, constant military patrols and the omnipresent threat of violence. In the midst of it, a middle-aged man named Raúl (Alfredo Castro) is obsessed with the idea of impersonating Tony Manero, John Travolta’s character from Saturday Night Fever. On the outskirts of the city, he leads a small group of devoted dancers who have set their sights on an upcoming “Tony look-alike” television competition. Raúl’s immoderate desire to win, coupled with an obsessive need to recreate the glass dance floor from the movie, leads him to commit a series of crimes and thefts and to act increasingly autocratic and cruel with his fellow hoofers. “Shot on 16mm, Tony Manero has a purposefully murky look and a frantic feel. The ultra-Dardenne camera follows Raúl as he darts through Santiago’s empty alleys and vacant lots, only pausing when he raptly watches Saturday Night Fever or attempts to imitate Tony's stomp-and-point rhythmic flailing. Feasting on this bizarre fascist posturing, director Pablo Larraín suggests that, with his sordid charisma, Raúl is a miniature Pinochet—reproducing the brutality of the state in his willingness to steal, exploit, betray and kill in the service of a fantasy.” —J. Hoberman, The Village Voice (98 min, Lorber Films)

View full SFFS Screen schedule

Showtimes: 1:45 pm, 4:20 pm, 7:15 pm, 9:25 pm.


Written by Alfredo Castro, Mateo Iribarren, Pablo Larraín. Photographed by Sergio Armstrong. With Alfredo Castro, Paola Lattus, Héctor Morales.
September 11–17, 2009
Sundance Kabuki Cinemas
DEVELOPER'S NOTE: http://sffs.org/content.aspx?pageid=1218