The only thing I have seen by Larraín is "No" which I really enjoyed.
I did see it, but didn't like it. The filmmakers decided to do something different with the bio-pic approach--make almost everything up. So the historical Neruda is almost nowhere present in the film. This might have been OK if they'd put an interesting story in its place, but all the film amounts to is Neruda escaping from Chile to Argentina, and this goes on and on. There is a policeman chasing him, but the character is given no substance whatsoever (apparently on purpose). The camera moves a lot, but the images are often ugly and/or video-looking. The soundtrack draws from a lot of modern composers (lots of Ives in particular), and that helped a bit, but overall I'd say the film is not a success. I guess we're supposed to give it a pass, though, cause Neruda was a commie.
"Neruda" looks interesting.
The camera moves a lot, but the images are often ugly and/or video-looking. The soundtrack draws from a lot of modern composers (lots of Ives in particular), and that helped a bit, but overall I'd say the film is not a success.
The filmmakers decided to do something different with the bio-pic approach--make almost everything up. So the historical Neruda is almost nowhere present in the film. This might have been OK if they'd put an interesting story in its place, but all the film amounts to is Neruda escaping from Chile to Argentina, and this goes on and on. There is a policeman chasing him, but the character is given no substance whatsoever (apparently on purpose).
I guess we're supposed to give it a pass, though, cause Neruda was a commie.