The gift of a daunting Dogo Argentino show dog provides unexpected opportunities for a laid-off pump attendant in this tender-hearted tale from Patagonia.
Films — by Language
- Arabic
- Bahasa Indonesian
- Bambara
- Bosnian
- Cantonese
- Catalan
- Czech
- Danish
- Dari
- English
- English Intertitles
- Finnish
- French
- Galician
- German
- Hebrew
- Hindi
- Hungarian
- In various languages
- Italian
- Japanese
- Javanese
- Korean
- Kurdish
- Mandarin
- Portuguese
- Quechua
- Russian
- Serbian
- Shanghainese
- Slovak
- Spanish
- Sukuma
- Swahili
- Swedish
- Tibetan
- Vietnamese
- Xhosa
- Zulu
Spanish
Duck Season
Temporada de patos
“If there's such a thing as a film cruising by on pure charm, that's just what this debut feature does.” — Shane Danielson, Edinburgh International Film Festival
The Future of Food
“The Future of Food gets to the elemental truths about genetically modified seeds and produce.” — Laura Singara, Village Voice
Little Sky
El cielito
Tender, suspenseful, beautifully observed tale of the bond that develops between a young Argentinian farmhand and the farmers’ neglected baby.
Machuca
"Machuca... is both sweet and stringent, attuned to the wonders of childhood as well as its cruelty and terror." — A.O. Scott, NY Times
Mad Hot Ballroom
Ballroom dancing teams from three New York public elementary schools prepare for competition. This irresistible picture of the civilising power of music, dance and inspired teaching may leave you hankering to move the kids to Manhattan.
Mondovino
“A fascinating picture on wine as business and pleasure, poetry and philosophy, a way of life and a form of colonialism.” — Philip French, The Observer
Pin Boy
Parapalos
This candid portrait of working life and camaraderie in a Buenos Aries bowling alley is a fine example of new Argentinian cinema.
Rolling Family
Familia rodante
Family chaos takes to the road in this amiable comedy from Argentina. “Slyly funny… a multi-generational road movie proving that the family that travels together unravels together.” — Nigel Andrews, Financial Times
The Sea Inside
Mar adentro
Javier Bardem is superb in this year’s Oscar winner for Best Foreign Language Film, the true story of Ramón Sampedro, who famously fought the Spanish government for the right to end his life.
The Take
Filmmaker Avi Lewis introduces his documentary (co-authored with Naomi Klein) following the efforts of laid-off Argentinian workers to occupy and restart factories abandoned after the 2001 economic collapse.
Whisky
Connoisseurs of the deadpan and the droll are invited to check out the Uruguayan sock factory movie. “A pint-size pleasure.” — NY Times