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Leonera

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Argentina, Korea, Brazil · 2008
1h 53m
Director Pablo Trapero
Starring Martina Gusman, Elli Medeiros, Rodrigo Santoro, Laura García
Genre Drama

In the hazy morning after a threesome, expectant mother Julia finds her partner dead, and his fling, Ramiro, badly injured. Police arrive on the scene and promptly throw Julia behind bars, where she sinks into a deep depression. However, she sheds her quiet, defeated demeanor when the eventual birth of her son gives her a reason to live.

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What are critics saying?

80

Time Out by

Part meticulous character study, part hyperrealist drama, Trapero’s film is as interested in documenting how such an institution functions on a day-to-day basis as he is in presenting the joys and pains of female cohabitation in such a confined space.

60

Empire by David Parkinson

Too many generic tropes for this downbeat, detached melodrama to convince as a work of social realism but a strong central performance and convincing depiction of the compartmentalisation of Argentina's women.

80

The Hollywood Reporter by Deborah Young

Guillermo Nieto's hand-held camerawork mimics Julia's nervous energy and keeps the audience locked up along with her, working in symbiosis with Federico Esquerro's forcefully realistic sound design.

50

Variety by Jay Weissberg

Situated somewhere between neo-realist study and standard women in prison pic, Lion's Den too frequently wanders into common territories to make the material its own.

63

San Francisco Chronicle by Mick LaSalle

Unfortunately the movie is also a bit too long, and for long stretches it's about as entertaining as, well, a long stretch. Still, if this were one of those movie-review TV shows, I'd have to give Lion's Den a (tiny) thumb's up, for its aura of authenticity and for the ferocity of Gusman's commitment.

60

The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw

Frustratingly, the film tells us little about the crime itself and the denouement is a little unconvincing. The taste of sweat and fear is, however, real enough.

70

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

Although it is not a comedy, Lion’s Den is suffused with sense of life lived in the present. Even the grimmest moments are not exploited to instill fear and loathing.

75

New York Post by V.A. Musetto

The dimly lit, exquisitely composed cinematography, by Guillermo Nieto, adds to the draw of this highly recommended movie.

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