El 18 de los García | Telescope Film
El 18 de los García

El 18 de los García

A couple moves from the rural area of the country to the city, looking for better live opportunities during times of unemployment and poverty, in which dreams seem far from coming true.

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What are critics saying?

88

Chicago Tribune by Nina Metz

Always vivid on screen, that quality also existed in her life and self-expression offscreen.

80

The New York Times by Alissa Wilkinson

It’s not just a fascinating glimpse into a woman who spent her whole life in the spotlight. It’s a chronicle of a moment when everything changed, and a sobering reminder that we often think we know who public figures are, but we rarely really understand.

80

Wall Street Journal by John Anderson

Documentarian Nanette Burstein has a wealth of photographic material at her disposal, much of it breathtakingly lovely, and she uses it gracefully and in the noble cause of forward motion.

80

Los Angeles Times by Robert Lloyd

All in all, Burstein’s film feels big and perceptive, a love letter to a remarkable, interesting and very human human.

80

The Telegraph by Anita Singh

The tapes – recordings of her 1964 interview sessions with her biographer, Richard Meryman – play out while we’re lavished with clips from Taylor’s films and newsreel of her looking fabulous. The tapes do lend an intimacy.

80

Variety by Owen Gleiberman

Taylor’s voice is singular in its expressiveness — she is insolent, mournful, sexy, outraged, dripping with debauched delight, and always casually candid. Her words invest even the most familiar events with a revealing intimacy.

75

Boston Globe by Mark Feeney

Listening to Taylor is so compelling the screen could be blank and “Lost Tapes” would still be interesting. But director Nanette Burstein keeps things visually abundant with home movies, snapshots, film stills, film clips, newsreels, publicity photos.

75

Chicago Sun-Times by Richard Roeper

Nanette Burstein...provides steady, no-frills direction that includes snippets of Taylor’s movies, a myriad of behind-the-scenes photos and newsreel footage; there’s a nearly endless supply of material, given Taylor starred in some 80 films and offscreen was one of the most photographed and filmed people ever.

70

The New Yorker by Richard Brody

The method is effective; “Elizabeth Taylor: The Lost Tapes” is no radical advance in documentary form, but its emphasis on the auditory over the visual subtly suggests the disconnect between a private individual and her public image.

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Caryn James

The movie star Taylor is the one who most often comes through in the film, but that is engaging enough.