By

Viola (Argentina/USA; 65 min.)

directed by:
Matías Piñeiro
starring:
CMaria Villar; Romina Paula; Agustina Muñoz; Elisa Carricajo;
Gabriela
Saidón; Laura Paredes; Julia Martinez Rubio; Esteban Gagliardi;
Julián
Tello; Alessio Rigo de Righi; Pablo Sigal; Alberto Ajaka

Viola
Kyle says:
“VIOLA inspired as much discussion as it did confusion, and one of the
reasons is audience inclination to view it as a deconstruction of
Shakespeare’s ‘Twelfth Night’ and to look for markers. This is a
mistake: I know, because I made it. Prodigiously gifted ‘New Wave’
Argentine director Matías Piñeiro explained that he is
making a series
of films based on female characters in Shakespeare. ROSALINDA (2011)
was derived from ‘As You Like It’ and preceded VIOLA; ISABELLA will be
based on ‘Measure for Measure’ and the project currently titled in
English THE PRINCESS OF FRANCE is inspired by ‘Love’s Labour’s Lost’
and the title character will be played by a man. 

The title character
is not the Shakespearean Viola; it is a young woman who with her
partner makes pirated CDs and DVDs and delivers them by bicycle around
contemporary Buenos Aires. Of equal prominence is a production based on
scenes from various Shakespeare plays in rehearsal and performance by
young actresses who also live the roles they play. Romantic scenes in
the plays become the same in the film. As the musical recording at the
end highlights, performances become scenes from everyday life and vice
versa, extending into all the arts. 

Director Piñeiro explained
his
structural overview as relationship breakup, performance, backstage
scene, another breakup, and another performance. His idea of theatre as
a taking off point of investigation into reality becomes an examination
into cinema. Ultimately the various strands of character, narrative,
relationships, art, and conversation are woven into a coherent unity.
This is not a film for the idle passage of time (even at its barely an
hour running time), nor is it the kind of Shakespeare adaptation
exemplified by the mesmerizing CAESAR MUST DIE, directed by Paolo and
Vittorio Taviani, and screened at the 2012 New York Film Festival. But
if you have interest in new directions being taken by current Argentine
cinema, VIOLA offers a worthwhile journey. In the program note
identifying characteristics of Piñeiro’s style, these words may
help to
clarify whether this film is for you: ‘serpentine camera movements,
slippages of language, an elliptical narrative, and a playful confusion
of reality and artifice.’ 3 cats

“Seen Wednesday, March 27, 2013, New Directors/New Films at the Walter
Reade Theater, Film Society of Lincoln Center, New York.”

Viola

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