
| 18-j | |
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Theatrical Poster |
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| Produced by | Fernando Blanco Cecilia Bossi Diego Dubcovsky Noemí Fuhrer Marcelo Pavan Jorge Rocca Pablo Rovito Luis A. Sartor Fernando Sokolowicz Guillermo Szelske Juan Vera |
| Narrated by | Norma Aleandro |
| Distributed by | INCAA |
| Release date(s) | Argentina: August 19, 2004 Brazil: October 4, 2004 |
| Running time | 100 minutes |
| Country | Argentina |
| Language | Spanish |
| IMDb • Allmovie | |
18-j (2004) is an Argentine docudrama. The motion picture is a collection of ten, ten-minute shorts, by ten Argentine directors.[1]
July 18th, 1994 is the date when terrorists detonated a bomb-loaded SUV in front of the AMIA Building in Buenos Aires, killing 86 people and wounding over 300 others. The perpretators have never been caught.
AMIA is the Argentina-Israeli Mutual Association, a charity, and the attack is considered the largest single incident of terrorism against Jews since World War II.
The film is a tribute to the memory of the victims from the Argentine cinema community, producers and directors, and released on the ten-year anniversary of the attack. Each director portrays his or her memory and impressions of July the 18th in their own way. The ten short films are shown in a sequence. The picture was co-produced by the INCAA (Instituto Nacional de Cine y Artes Audiovisuales) and ten of the most active Argentine producers.
The film opens with a brief introduction by Argentine actor Norma Aleandro.
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Because the picture involved numerous explosions it was shot on an Argentine Army base.
The short-films capture Argentine life at several social levels, both Jewish and non-Jewish. The ten directors use a variety of cinematic styles: the sentimental, hard-hitting, and the abstract.
As important, the filmmakers emphasize the universality of the tragedy.
The film opened in Argentina on August 19, 2004. In Brazil it opened October 4, 2004, at the Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival.
The film has been screened at various film festivals, including: the Palm Beach Jewish Film Festival, Palm Beach, Florida; the Washington Jewish Film Festival, Washington DC, USA; the Haifa International Film Festival, Haifa, Israel; the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival, San Francisco; the Hong Kong Jewish Film Festival, Hong Kong; the Boston Jewish Film Festival, Boston; and others.
Each of the following Argentine film production companies chose one director for the film:[2]
aka The Memory
aka The Call
aka Shame
aka The Divine Comedy
aka The Tearful
aka The Wrath of God
aka Surprise
Jonathan Holland, film critic for Variety magazine, liked the various stories and how they provide a "perceptive overview of Argenina's society. He wrote, wrote, "This worthy and affecting homage features styles from abstract to hard-hitting. Political fest sidebars are the pic's likeliest destination, along with arthouses in territories with a cultural interest in the tragedy...As a byproduct, pic reps an often perceptive overview of Argentine life at several social levels. Though many of the dead were Jewish, most helmers have significantly emphasized the universality of the tragedy rather than focusing on Jewish victimization."[3]
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