Actores Relatos Salvajes __link__
In the pantheon of contemporary cinema, few films have dissected the fragile veneer of civilization with the surgical precision and gleeful nihilism of Damián Szifrón’s 2014 masterpiece, Relatos salvajes (Wild Tales). The Spanish title is instructive: relatos are stories, tales—but salvajes implies not merely “wild,” but the untamed, the brutal, the originary state before the leash of law. The film is a hexagon of fury, a six-part symphony of escalating violence where the protagonist is not a person but a pressure cooker: modern Argentine society. Yet beneath the black comedy and the arterial spray lies a profound meditation on acting—not theatrical performance, but the compulsory performance of civility. Szifrón’s deep thesis is that every citizen is an actor in the tragicomedy of the social contract. When the script fails, when the role becomes unbearable, the actor does not merely exit the stage; they burn it down. This essay argues that Wild Tales uses narrative structure and the archetype of the “actor” to diagnose the lie of repressed resentment, positing that violence is not an aberration of the social order but its most honest punctuation mark.
Reparto de la película Relatos Salvajes : directores, actores e equipo técnico - SensaCine.com actores relatos salvajes
(Romina): Portrays a bride who discovers her groom's infidelity during their wedding reception. Leonardo Sbaraglia In the pantheon of contemporary cinema, few films
(Mauricio): A wealthy man attempting to buy a fall guy to take the blame for his son's hit-and-run. Rita Cortese Julieta Zylberberg Yet beneath the black comedy and the arterial