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Eisenstein in Guanajuato

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Netherlands, Belgium, Finland · 2015
1h 45m
Director Peter Greenaway
Starring Elmer Bäck, Luis Alberti, Rasmus Slätis, Jakob Öhrman
Genre Comedy, Romance

In 1931, following the success of the film Battleship Potemkin, Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein travels to the city of Guanajuato, Mexico, to shoot a new film. Freshly rejected by Hollywood, Eisenstein soon falls under Mexico’s spell. Chaperoned by his guide Palomino Cañedo, the director opens up to his suppressed fears as he embraces a new world of sensual pleasures and possibilities that will shape the future of his art.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

83

The Film Stage by

Elmer Bäck’s performance as Eisenstein is exceptional, his manic energy somehow able to match that of the film’s visuals and achieving a synergy of exuberance.

60

Village Voice by Aaron Hillis

Rigorous and outrageous, Greenaway's defiant approach to narrative only offers insight into his character, not Eisenstein's.

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Boyd van Hoeij

Greenaway’s habitual approach is perfect for this material, constantly externalizing the director’s ideas about Eisenstein’s life and work and the way the two are connected in a way that speaks directly -- often quite literally -- to the audience.

75

Slant Magazine by Carson Lund

What comes through clearly by the end of the film is the act of one artist's eccentric generosity breathing new awareness into the life of another.

63

New York Post by Farran Smith Nehme

The film has all the incessant showiness that can make Greenaway irksome: split screens, CGI, deliberately alienating performances. But the man loves a beautiful shot and a witty line; those are the things that carry the film.

50

The A.V. Club by Ignatiy Vishnevetsky

Photos, clips from Eisenstein’s own films and from newsreels, and the director’s erotic drawings are spliced in or sometimes projected over the background, but the overloaded visual plane only underlines the fact that Eisenstein In Guanajuato never moves anywhere; eventually, it becomes stultifying. It’s a movie jumping in place.

40

Screen International by Lee Marshall

Sure, there’s a strong element of arch playfulness in the exercise, but that doesn’t make the end result any less tiresome. In Eisenstein In Guanajuato, Greenaway is good at making us look, but not at making us care.

80

Variety by Peter Debruge

Greenaway has wrought an outrageously unconventional and deliriously profane biopic that could take decades to be duly appreciated.

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