Rome-based international sales and production company Tvco has scooped up sales rights to Argentine comedy “El Padre de Mis Hijos” (“The Father of My Sons”) which Tvco is presenting along with drama “El Silencio del Cazador” (“The Hunter’s Silence”) at the Malaga Spanish screenings (Nov. 17-20). Both are directed by Martin de Salvo and produced by Domenica Films of Argentina.
“El Padre de Mis Hijos” centers on Eva, who is in her late 30s and is facing the pressure of friends and family about missing out on her peak child-bearing years. She becomes obsessed about having a child, but the problem is finding a suitable father.
“Tvco’s Vincenzo Mosca and Doménica Films’ producer Pepe Salvia worked together in the past on a co-production project between Argentina and Italy that eventually did not happen, but the professional bond, borne from that experience, paved the way for a stronger professional relationship,...
“El Padre de Mis Hijos” centers on Eva, who is in her late 30s and is facing the pressure of friends and family about missing out on her peak child-bearing years. She becomes obsessed about having a child, but the problem is finding a suitable father.
“Tvco’s Vincenzo Mosca and Doménica Films’ producer Pepe Salvia worked together in the past on a co-production project between Argentina and Italy that eventually did not happen, but the professional bond, borne from that experience, paved the way for a stronger professional relationship,...
- 11/18/2020
- by Anna Marie de la Fuente
- Variety Film + TV
South Korea’s Pucheon International Fantastic Film Festival (PiFan), July 18, 2014
Aficionados of art-house horror will find much to like in the brooding Argentinian vampire film Darkness by Day and the Danish werewolf/coming-of-age tale When Animals Dream.
Darkness by Day, rich with dreamlike, brooding atmosphere, focuses on Virginia (Mora Recalde), who lives in an old mansion in a remote coastal area of Argentina. When her cousin Julia falls ill during a local rabies outbreak, her … Continue reading →
Horrornews.net...
Aficionados of art-house horror will find much to like in the brooding Argentinian vampire film Darkness by Day and the Danish werewolf/coming-of-age tale When Animals Dream.
Darkness by Day, rich with dreamlike, brooding atmosphere, focuses on Virginia (Mora Recalde), who lives in an old mansion in a remote coastal area of Argentina. When her cousin Julia falls ill during a local rabies outbreak, her … Continue reading →
Horrornews.net...
- 8/4/2014
- by Joseph Perry
- Horror News
The countryside of Argentina is the setting for Martín Desalvo's Darkness by Day (El Día Trajo la Oscuridad), a little horror film that rests almost entirely on its two main actresses, Mora Recalde and Romina Paula. They play Virginia and Anabel, two beautiful young women who, while related by blood as cousins, are quite different and not entirely familiar with each other. Darkness prevails in the wooded, foggy scenery of the film, and director Desalvo is not really interested in the gore or the thrills; this is all about atmosphere and the interaction between the two girls. The story kicks off when Virginia's father leaves their countryside house in order to visit his sick niece (Anabel's sister), who has been in bed for some time. Next...
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- 5/15/2014
- Screen Anarchy
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