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Rodrigo D: No Future [DVD]

4.4 de 5 estrellas 12 calificaciones

Opciones de DVD adicionales Edición Discos
Precio de Amazon
Nuevo desde Usado desde
DVD
agosto 17, 2004
1
US$66.49
Género Drama
Formato Color, NTSC, DVD, Pantalla completa, Subtitulado
Contribuyente Carlos Mario Restrepo, Wilson Blandon, Oscar Hernandez, Ramiro Meneses, Victor Manuel Gaviria, Jackson Idrain Gallego, Vilma Diaz Ver más
Idioma Español
Tiempo de ejecución 1 hora y 31 minutos

Descripción del producto

Reseña del editor

Duro y en tu cara, Rodrigo D revela la brutal historia de un adolescente que lo intenta en una de las ciudades más difíciles del mundo: Medellín, Colombia. Rodrigo sueña con tocar rock and roll.

Críticas

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Detalles del producto

  • Relación de aspecto ‏ : ‎ 1.33:1
  • Descatalogado por el fabricante ‏ : ‎ No
  • Clasificación de MPAA ‏ : ‎ Unrated (Not Rated)
  • Dimensiones del producto ‏ : ‎ 7,75 x 5,75 x 0,53 pulgadas; 3,2 Onzas
  • Director ‏ : ‎ Victor Manuel Gaviria
  • Formato multimedia ‏ : ‎ Color, NTSC, DVD, Pantalla completa, Subtitulado
  • Tiempo de ejecución ‏ : ‎ 1 hora y 31 minutos
  • Fecha de lanzamiento ‏ : ‎ agosto 17, 2004
  • Actores ‏ : ‎ Wilson Blandon, Vilma Diaz, Jackson Idrain Gallego, Oscar Hernandez, Ramiro Meneses
  • Subtítulos: ‏ : ‎ Inglés
  • Estudio ‏ : ‎ Facets
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0002CHJEQ
  • Número de discos ‏ : ‎ 1
  • Opiniones de clientes:
    4.4 de 5 estrellas 12 calificaciones

Opiniones de clientes

4.4 de 5 estrellas
12 calificaciones globales

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Opiniones destacadas de los Estados Unidos

  • Calificado en Estados Unidos el 11 de julio de 2012
    Classic film from Colombia from famed director Victor Gaviria. In this film he takes us to the mean streets of Medellin back in the late 80's through the eyes of its youth. To be honest the level of despair and feeling of nothingness and crushing poverty makes a very grim picture. However it was an honest film, Mr. Gaviria used real street kids to capture its authenticity. In doing so, a rare film was made, truly a must see.
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  • Calificado en Estados Unidos el 24 de septiembre de 2005
    Rodrigo D is suppose to represent a "reality" film before "reality" TV emerged as a common and popular viewing choice. We are to follow the daily routine of Rodrigo D, a very poor and angry young man, as he trys to understand where he is going and what he wants to be/do. Curously, Rodirgo is suppose to be a drummer in a Punk band. But we never see him play the drums. In fact, his best musical effort is purchasing a set of drum sticks for 150 pesos...about $0.08.

    Rodrigo, like the film, just drifts from place to place, moment to moment...mostly arguing, fighting, yelling and lieing his way about town. Along the way he steals some things, meets some friends, and they get killed, In the end, of course, he lives and the film ends.

    Senseless, meaningless, useless...Rodrigo D goes no where...just like his film. Those who may have been killed duringthis filming, or shortly thereafter, arethe lucky one.
  • Calificado en Estados Unidos el 8 de noviembre de 2009
    This is kind of like a "City of God" from Colombia in as much as it focuses on the youth in the roughest, poorest areas of a South American country.

    The focus is on how punk rock is interpreted in Colombia by these street kids. Some reviews have said that these kids are the opposite of the DIY ethos of punk because they actually pursue material things, through crime. But that is kind of missing the point. These kids live in poverty. Half of their homes are barely finished structures.

    They lead desperate and marginalized lives. With the anti-authoritarin chants and sloganeering and nihilism, punk rock makes the best soundtrack for it.

    Rodrigo is the one kid who seems to have any depth to him. Still bereaved after his mothers passing, he struggles to find a way to channel his frustration and interest. The only thing he wants to do is play drums, but he has not sticks or kit. He also has a morbid fascination with heights, foreshadowing what's to come.

    I enjoyed the movie more for being a glimpse into another world. I grew up into punk rock in New York. I knew plenty of latino skin heads and punk rockers and it was just funny to see some of the parallels.
  • Calificado en Estados Unidos el 5 de mayo de 2013
    Rodrigo D is not the best foreign film ever made; I don't think it was even intended for the awards. But it definitely is the best documentary movie portraying the social consequences of the drug ventures that flooded Medellin in a sea of violence and decadence in the decade of the 80's. Easy money and quick death, this seemed to be the motto of the youth living in the slums in that time. "No Nacimos Pa'Semilla" (We weren't born as a seed) is a book written during the nineties exploring this same notion by a local writer. Most of these kids didn't expect to make it over 20, and most didn't.

    "Lost is you, is me, are we all"- Line whispered by Rodrigo when Ramon, a worthless thief and low life drug dealer, tells him it's too bad they don't have a gun to steal a nice motorcycle.

    I don't intend to write here how this came to be. It is always more complicated than it seems. Yes, there is poverty, a blind eye from the local government and the hand of drug lords. But it all has its roots in the 50's with the beginning of the internal conflict that Colombia suffers till this day, and seems like a complete mess unlikely to be solved. As a Colombian, and citizen of Medellin, I have begun a series of articles you can find in Hubpages telling the story of the Colombian Conflict and another article with a complete analysis (with the movie taken from Youtube) of Rodrigo D No Futuro.
    You can find both by going in to Hubpages or searching on Google:

    "Rodrigo D No Futuro Complete Movie Online and Critic Review (with english subtitles)": [...]

    "An Easy History Timeline To Understand The Colombian Armed Conflict Part 1 - Conservatives Vs. Liberals": [...]
  • Calificado en Estados Unidos el 15 de julio de 2006
    I'll say that the first time i saw this movie i was 16. I am honest saying that at that time i didn't like it. I was expecting something different and at that time the movie industry in colombia was in its beginning so i expected to see something more like a hollywood movie on those days.

    As the years gone by i found this dvd on amazon and decided to purchase it. Well....now it's different. Now i understand the movie a little bit more but it's still confussing. But there's something really clear now...this is a great movie if you watch it as a documentary of the life in Medellin at 90's.

    The apathy of this teenager, who become a great colombian actor afterwards Ramiro Meneses, and his dream to start a punk band, with no talent, except the one of waving the drum sticks on the air, makes you feel in a documentary movie the same as ones that you see about guys on the National Geographic Channel but with more non-sense violence and no future.