Everybody Has A Plan is
a powerful gothic noir tale of two brothers who grew up in the Tigre
Delta of Argentina. Agustin has left his past behind, becoming a
children's doctor in Buenos Aires, where he seems to be drifting out
of his life, his marriage, and his very existence. He sits alone in
their flat, the gulf widening between him and his wife, played with
great outward chill and inward anger by Soledad Villamil. Pedro is
the brother who stayed behind, to live a life of crimes both petty
and serious (including kidnapping) and living for the day, the
traditional getting by of the Delta natives, often at the expense of
the Buenos Aires-type weekend and summer people. But when Pedro
discovers he has incurable cancer, he decides to visit his
long-estranged brother.
The visit has a simple
reason; Pedro is terminal, and wants his brother's help in
terminating his life. And when he dies, Agustin, whose relationship
to his own life is terminal, leaves his brother's body behind in the
tub, and goes back to the house where he grew up, pretending to be
Pedro. As his wife will say to him, when he is briefly in jail, and
she realises what has happened, 'you would rather be in prison than
be yourself with your wife', which defines the kind of prison in
which Agustin sees himself.
Viggo Mortensen, who
spoke Spanish as a child in Argentina, plays both brothers, but of
course here there is an added twist, as he is playing one brother
playing the other. It's a brilliant performance, full of the
uncertainties that define Agustin in relation to his past, a past he
is incapable of escaping. More than that, by assuming Pedro's
identity, he also assumes Pedro's choices. Agustin might enjoy the
life of a simple honey-maker, Pedro's erstwhile occupation—and you
might see it as the choice between the mind and the body, the id and
the ego, but it creates for Agustin a responsibility as much as a
freedom. Agustin has, in his mind, been living for other people's
expectations, their dreams, while Pedro lives only for himself.
Writer/director Ana Piterbarg's first
feature is a noirish gem of character study that moves at a slow
pace, the rhythm of the Delta, as it were. It's a slow burn, a
build-up to the violence that has been implicit throughout the film,
implicit in the Delta, which is shot with great creativity by Lucio
Bonelli, combining beauty and threat, and always with a sense of
confinment, whether is the apartment, the prison cell, or the Delta
itself.
Mortensen, of course,
can act in three languages, and the Tigre Delta is the same sort of
evocative and ominous setting that the Louisiana bayou would be, when
this film is remade in the States. Of course Mortensen won't be the
star, but it will hard for anyone to match this performance, and along with The Hunt this has to be in the running for Crime Time's best foreign crime film of 2013.
Everybody Has A Plan is on release now
note: this review will also appear at Crime Time (www.crimetime.co.uk)
Some years ago I had a Buenos Aires temporary rent for my holidays. Staying in Buenos Aires I went visit the Tigre and I stayed in a hotel for a night. Actually the Tigre is one of the most nicest places I have ever see in a megalopolis, it is amazing the possibility of live in an island, surrounded by nature in one of the world biggest cities. I know that there is a ferry that link directly Tigre with Puerto Madero which makes of Tigre an amazing place to live!
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