The New York Times by A.O. Scott
The Princess of France has an appealing lightness and modesty, but it also feels flimsy and thin, like clever scribblings in the margins of a book, fleeting insights in search of form and energy.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Argentina · 2014
1h 7m
Director Matías Piñeiro
Starring Julián Larquier Tellarini, Agustina Muñoz, Romina Paula, María Villar
Genre Comedy
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A year after his father’s death in Mexico, Victor returns to Buenos Aires with a twofold mission. On the one hand, he brings with him a new project for his former theater company; on the other, he abandons his part as The Princess of France and takes up a new role.
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
The Princess of France has an appealing lightness and modesty, but it also feels flimsy and thin, like clever scribblings in the margins of a book, fleeting insights in search of form and energy.
Slant Magazine by Christopher Gray
The distinctiveness of Matías Piñeiro's alluring brand of formalism lies in this deference to chance and alchemy.
Even the most deliberately airy amusement can use more ingenious structuring and assertive personality than Pineiro is inclined to provide at this (still early) stage in his career.
While not aspiring to the heights of the texts underscoring his work, Piñero displays a daring formalism that transcends its many inspirations to find its own unique rhythms.
The A.V. Club by Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
In an era in which the big movies are bigger and more expensive than they’ve ever been, few acts of resistance seem more meaningful than making a small, careful, and personal film that still wants nothing more than to invite the viewer into its private world.
The Princess Of France ambles from one low-key encounter to another, rarely engaging directly with the Bard, and never elevating its heart rate beyond the resting level.
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