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(Chile,
2001, 94 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
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Set in a breathtaking landscape of a remote coastal town in Patagonia, La Fiebre del Loco tells the comical and moving story of an infectious fever that temporarily contaminates southern Chile. When the authorities briefly lift a ban on fishing the loco, a shellfish with aphrodisiac powers—divers, fishermen, dealers, businessmen and prostitutes all descend to a small fishing village in search of this endangered delicacy, which is also highly sought after by Japanese epicures. The mood of this sleepy town becomes frantic and feverish with everyone trying to cash in on the loco catch. The enchantment that the precious good inspires in the village works its way into the audience who is in for a tremendously enjoyable journey in this delightful film by the director of the Chilean smash hit Machuca. “A colorful, amusingly observed tale of love, lust, greed and free-trade chaos, handsomely shot in knockout locations...Wood’s assured employment of the spirited ensemble of well-played characters within a vividly drawn, microscopic world (at times recalling vintage Robert Altman) keeps the earthily human comedy enjoyable.” – David Rooney, Variety "Grittily realistic, unsentimental in its depiction of character, and set against an inmense, remote, indifferent landscape that seems to dwarf human passions and aspirations, this is an extraordinary and compeling drama." - Herald Tribune
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Cinema Village | ||
| 22 East 12th street / (212) 924-3363 | |||
| Monday, February 7, 7:30pm | |||
| Cinema Arts Centre | |||
| 423 Park Avenue (Huntington, NY) / (631) 423-7611 | |||
| Monday, February 14, 7:30pm | |||
| American Museum of the Moving Image | |||
| presented
as part of the "World Cinema Fridays" series. 35th Ave. at 36th St. (Astoria, Queens) / (718) 784-0077 |
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| Friday, February 11, 7:30pm | |||
| Jacob Burns Film Center | |||
| 364 Manville Road, Pleasantville, NY 10570 (914-747-5555) | |||
| Tuesday, February 22, 5:15pm & 7:30pm | |||
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The
Cinema Tropical Winter Film Series is sponsored by The New York Times
and is made possible with public funds from the New York State Council
on the Arts, a state agency
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