Writer
Él es romántico, tímido. Ella es realista, enérgica. Después de giros y vueltas, juntos se van a casa. Mientras se muestran esos créditos, él y ella, 5 años después, terminan viendo la película. Ambos se conocieron durante el rodaje de una película que él dirigió. Actualmente son una pareja estable, pero atravesando una crisis.
Director
Él es romántico, tímido. Ella es realista, enérgica. Después de giros y vueltas, juntos se van a casa. Mientras se muestran esos créditos, él y ella, 5 años después, terminan viendo la película. Ambos se conocieron durante el rodaje de una película que él dirigió. Actualmente son una pareja estable, pero atravesando una crisis.
Editor
Ulises wakes up one day and finds that his girlfriend, Alma, is missing. He embarks on an intense search that reveals hidden aspects of her life which connect to the time they spent together to lead Ulises to investigate a professor of hers and her obsession with a book by Borges. When Bianca, Alma's twin, shows up, circumstances escalate quickly to make Ulises commit a crime just so he can find Alma again.
Editor
In 1971, the graphic and advertising artist Juan Fresán set out to film the story of Orélie Antoine de Tounens, the delirious Frenchman who 100 years earlier had proclaimed himself ‘King of Patagonia and Araucanía’, with his own constitution, currency and ministers. The film, titled "New France," was left unfinished, first due to lack of funds and then because its author had to go into exile. If the story is familiar to many today, this is because in the '80s Carlos Sorín made' The King's movie ', inspired by that frustrated shoot, in which he had worked as a cinematographer. In 2004, Fresán contacted Turturro to help him rescue the preserved film. Fresán died in that same year, but Turturro decided to retake the trace of that truncated film, exhuming unpublished materials, returning to their original settings and gathering testimonies, to illuminate the two stories - one within the other - that make up this true story, more strange and fascinating than any fiction.