Whisky

Whisky

2004 ""
Whisky
Whisky

Whisky

7.1 | 1h39m | en | Drama

When his long-lost brother resurfaces, Jacobo, desperate to prove his life has added up to something, looks to scrounge up a wife. He turns to Marta, an employee at his sock factory, with whom he has a prickly relationship.

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7.1 | 1h39m | en | Drama , Comedy | More Info
Released: October. 12,2004 | Released Producted By: Pandora Film , Rizoma Films Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

When his long-lost brother resurfaces, Jacobo, desperate to prove his life has added up to something, looks to scrounge up a wife. He turns to Marta, an employee at his sock factory, with whom he has a prickly relationship.

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Cast

Andrés Pazos , Mirella Pascual , Jorge Bolani

Director

Gonzalo Delgado Galiana

Producted By

Pandora Film , Rizoma Films

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Reviews

valis1949 In America photographers exclaim, "Say Cheese!", to elicit a smile, but in Uraguay, it's, "Say Whisky!". WHISKY, co-directed by Juan Pablo Rebella and Pablo Stoll, is a droll and dead-pan character study set in Uraquay. Jacobo is a Jewish, 60 year old sock factory owner (it's actually more of a 'shop'}, who invites his more successful brother to attend their mother's final internment. Jacobo has spent a significant portion of his life nursing their dying mother, and after her passing, his life is completely devoid of any emotional attachment, while Herman has married and raised a family. So to demonstrate the barest degree of social validation, Jacobo asks his shop assistant, Marta, to pose as his wife for the few days of Herman's visit. Not a lot happens, although the trio travels to the resort town of Piripolis, but it's off-season and they are almost by themselves and there is little to do. The plot is secondary to the studied and calculated performance of the three main characters who enact a desperately throttled search for emotional connectivity. If you enjoy the films of Abstract Expressionist, Jim Jarmusch, you'll probably love this whimsically comical gem of a film. Since so much of the narrative is conveyed by austere and simple mannerisms of the three principle lead characters, WHISKY is reminiscent of the classic silent films of the past. WHISKY is a rewarding cinematic experience which truly embodies the belief that, 'Less Is More'.
JoeytheBrit Another reviewer's summary of this Uruguayan film is 'the psychology of failure' and I think that is probably a perfect description. This film is so subtle and understated that the vein of humour that runs through it - sardonic, dry and immaculately observed - will pass many people by. The mundanity of life, and the failure of some to see the fact that moments of happiness and relief can be wrestled from such an existence only by those with the vision and desire to do so, is reinforced by strands deliberately left untied. This film won't be for all tastes, but for those with the patience to watch beyond a slow (but necessarily so) opening act, it will prove to be a film worth watching.
Andres Salama This droll, deadpan comedy from Uruguay, clearly influenced by directors such as Jarmusch and Kaurismaki, is a real find. Directors Rebella (who killed himself shortly after this film was released) and Stoll, tell the story of two middle aged Jewish brothers. The elder brother has remained in Uruguay, running a decrepit sock factory, and acts taciturn and resentful, feeling life has cheated on him. The younger, more easy going brother, has moved to Brazil, where he has raised a family and runs a successful textile factory in the Sao Paulo area. When their mother dies, the brother in Brazil returns to Uruguay for the funeral. So that his younger brother will not pity him, his older brethren asks a middle aged, somewhat plump employee to pretend to be with his wife when his brother returns (this plot point is not really very believable, but in the cinema you sort of accept it). There is little else plot wise to the movie, as the brothers and the fake wife tour some of the deserted, sunless beaches of Uruguay to kill time and to get acquainted (or reacquainted) with each other as well as to settle past scores. To those that thing South America is everywhere a tropical and exotic place, they might be surprised to see a movie that is somewhat reminiscent of the old Eastern Bloc movies (Uruguay is well to the south of the tropics, its climate is temperate, and is the least typically south American of Spanish speaking nations in the continent). In a way, this movie might be also be a metaphor of Uruguay, once a country that was called the Switzerland of South America for its democracy and progressivism, but that in the last few decades has seen nasty military dictatorships, and some of its infrastructure and social capital run down. Worth seeing and quite moving.
Roberto I recently saw this masterpiece of Latin American cinema. I've always taught that you don't need a big budget to make a big movie. Great movies relay on a great message, a solid statement. On this particular case "Whisky" from the beginning makes a point through its own images and pace. The viewer gets immersed in a routine, a horrible way of life of the main character (Jacobo Koller) that consists of living with no ambition, owning a horrible sock factory and going home with nothing... not a smile, not a desire, nothing, just the same routine over and over again. At the beginning when we see the same shots over and over, it seems like the movie is insisting upon itself, but is too important to state the point of the routine. We, as viewers get tired of watching this terrible life, imagine what it would be to live this life. When the main characters brother (Herman Koller) comes to Uruguay (a far more successful,and younger brother, that lives in Brazil), Jacobo asks Marta (an employee of his) to pretend she's his wife, probably to avoid criticism from his brother and to bare his brother's trip to Uruguay with someone else. Marta has the same features as Jacobo she lives a life of routine, with no surprises, nothing to take her out of her boredom. She's shy, and retrieved within herself, there will be a couple of scenes when we can see that probably Marta has been like this since she was a girl. Her relationship with Herman grows, she's in movement she wants something new. As for Jacobo he doesn't feel anything for life he's pessimistic, stubborn, a man with no dreams. The movie invites us to review our own life, are we going in a direction of routine and boredom? or are we looking for something new? Sometimes we can find that breath of life in the smallest of places, in the most unconventional of places, a book, a movie, a song, a trip, a person anything can give us something to live. Marta surely received that breath, and we all can.