Harto The Borges

Harto The Borges

Poster Release
Directed by Eduardo Montes-Bradley
Produced by Contrakultura Films
Written by Eduardo Montes-Bradley
Starring Jorge Luis Borges, Ariel Dorfman, Christian Ferrer, Martin Caparros, Osvaldo Bayer, Franco Lucentini, Horacio Gonzalez, Paolo Collo
Narrated by Eduardo Montes-Bradley
Cinematography Eduardo Montes-Bradley
Edited by Eduardo Montes-Bradley and Eduardo López
Distributed by Heritage Film Project, Alexander Street Press, Kanopy
Release dates
  • September 2000 (2000-09)
Running time
80 minutes
Country Argentina
Language Spanish and Italian
Budget U$S 120.000

Harto The Borges is a documentary film by Eduardo Montes-Bradley.[1] Harto The Borges[2] explores the narcissistic side of Jorge Luis Borges, the author of El Aleph, his frequent and often criticized comments to the press, his distinctive and gentle ironies. Harto The Borges had a theatrical release in Buenos Aires in September 2000, and was well received by the critics.[3] Since then has been frequently exhibited at forums, campuses, and film festivals. On October 4, 2011, Harto The Borges was made available to the general audience in Argentina through the On Line version of Revista Cultura Ñ, (Diario Clarin) in Buenos Aires. The film was released alongside an article in which the director views the film ten years after its premier at the Cine Cosmos.[4]

Synopsis

The portrait of Borges emerges as a counterpoint to the interviewees, some of which evoke scandal and most of which cut through stereotypes and presuppositions surrounding this key figure.[5] The title of the film is a reference to a quote from the poem "Borges and I", slightly modify to pay a tribute to the writer's billings.[6] The strategy employed by Montes-Bradley when it comes to Borges, a writer of whom almost everything has been said, consists on giving the word to the writer himself and to a select group of intellectuals who dwell on the margins of the Argentine cultural aparatik. Montes-Bradley, however, does not exhibit Borges like a painting to be admired but rather as counterpoint to the observations of others. We are neither the hapless witnesses of another saccharine celebration of Jorge Luis Borges, nor are we forced to endure another fashionable defrocking of an idol. The Borges that emerges from the interaction of the testimonies in this documentary surges from the heat of the debate, from the strong opinions, some certainly scandalous, most politically incorrect.

Billing Block

Harto The Borges was made possible with a grant from the National Institute of Cinema and Audiovisual Arts. Produced by Iruña Films[7] (Argentina). Producer: Soledad Liendo. Associate Producer Sara Kaplan. Direct Sound: Jadur Mantecón. Soundmix: Mario Fachinsky and Gaspar Schever. Animation scenes designed by Vicky Biagiola and Liliana Romero. Lab: DuArt (New York), Continental Film (Miami), and Videocolor (Buenos Aires). Offline BIN CINE. Color by Gustavo Gorzanczany. Masterization: Accord Productions, Miami. Final credits thank the University of Virginia, University of Notre Dame, University of Texas at Austin, Instituto Español de Cooperación, Universidad de Salamanca, Gianni Mina, and others. Directed and edited by Eduardo Montes-Bradley.

Interviews & Locations

A number of interviews were filmed in S-16mm, and digital DV using cameras Aaton and Sony VX 1000. Interviews were conducted on location: In Buenos Aires: Jorge Luis Borges, Ariel Dorfman, Horacio Gonzalez, Christian Ferrer, Martín Caparrós and Alejandro Horowicz; Berlin: Osvaldo Bayer; Turin: Franco Lucentini and Paolo Collo; Montevideo: Luis Sepúlveda. Other locations: Geneva, Paris.

References

  1. Harto The Borges at the Internet Movie Database.
  2. El amante de cine. Año IX. Issue 102. September 2000. Críticas. Buenos Aires Argentina
  3. Diario Clarin, Cine: Crítica. Buenos Aires Thursday, September 14th, 2000. "De Ideas y paradojas" by AMV.
  4. "Harto The Borges: diez años después" Diario Clarin, Revista de Cultura Ñ. Section Escenarios, Cine. On Line. October 4th, 2011
  5. All Movie by Nathan Southern
  6. Block de Behar, Lisa. Author's Introduction. P. x . State University of New York, Albany, 2014
  7. OCLC WorldCat. Number 229359170. Harto the Borges
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