Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • When Chueca Dies
  • Under the Burning Sun
  • Garden of Earthly Delights (The)
  • Radleys (The)
  • Life After
  • Skin of Youth
  • Caravaggio
  • Thanks to the Hard Work of the Elephants
  • On the Road
  • Between Dreams and Hope
  • Becoming
  • Agon
  • Girlfriends
  • Shadows of Willow Cabin
  • Erupcja
  • Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror
  • Tens Across the Borders
  • Lesbian Space Princess
  • Bleed Like Me
  • Stranger (The)
  • Kingdom
  • Dancer (The)
  • Afrodite
  • Last Dance at the Sundance Stompede
  • Sacrifice
  • Eat/Sleep/Cheer/Repeat
  • Class of 2000 (The)
  • 100 Nights of Hero
  • Hedda
  • Fathers and Sons
  • Marty Supreme
  • Women Wearing Shoulder Pads
  • In Hell with Ivo
  • Yugo Florida
  • Truth About Jussie Smollett? (The)
  • Amantes
  • Lolita
  • Namas Dei: The Tucker J. James Story
  • Scare BNB: The Double Booking
  • Holy Boy (The)

Stolen Man (The)

Country: Argentina, Language: Spanish, 91 mins

Original Title

El hombre robado
  • Director: Matías Piñeiro
  • Writer: Matías Piñeiro
  • Producer: Pablo Chernov, Pablo Di Luozzo, Carolina Krasñansky

CGiii Comment

Piñeiro's sparkling debut film breathlessly follows a clever, capricious young woman as she carefully interweaves friends and lovers into an intricate web of secretive yet often unexpectedly compassionate games. Together with her best friend and fellow tour guide at a rival Buenos Aires historical museum, Piñeiro's headstrong heroine attempts to tame the unpredictable course of her heart, eccentrically drawing inspiration from Sarmiento's magnum opus, Facundo. With its grainy 16mm black-and-white cinematography, its political sub- and super-texts and its compelling portrait of impetuous youth, The Stolen Man recalls the alternately sober and sprightly nouvelle vague of Jean Eustache and Jacques Rivette.


Trailer...

Cast & Characters

Ana Cambre
Francisco García Faure
Daniel Gilman Calderón
Sabrina Korn
Nicolas Malusardi
Julia Martínez Rubio
Romina Paula
Alejandro Sirkin
María Villar