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Saturday, Oct 11, 2003
Crane World
Winner of three prizes at the Buenos Aires Indie Fest, this bare-bones, highly improvisational look at a 50-year-old construction worker delivers one of the most profound, affectionate glimpses of modern working-class realities since the Neorealist movement. Part of a new breed of Argentine filmmakers anxious to show the lives of people left behind by the country's supposed economic boom, debut director Pablo Trapero employs sensitivity, candor, and a firm sense of irony to capture one man's daily realities of labor, laughter, struggle, and hope. Looking for a new start in life, the middle-aged Rulo becomes a trainee for a coveted crane-operating job in Buenos Aires. Hopeful for the first time in a while, he even finds time to court a woman, Adriana. Just as things are looking up, destiny turns the tables again. A profound, affectionate glimpse of modern working-class life, made with a refreshing, unpolished energy.
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