Rejtman’s legendary feature debut became an instant cult sensation, immediately recognized as an authentic, iconic harbinger of a new sensibility in Argentine and Latin American filmmaking. Rapado boldly announced Rejtman’s signature laconic style with its restrained camera work, zero-degree performance style, crisply distilled dialogue and its careful structure of repetitions that both abstract and intensify the largely nocturnal world tightly contained within it. A close adaptation of the title entry from Rejtman’s eponymous collection of short stories, Rapado follows two, or perhaps three, days and late nights in the life of a young man still stuck at home and enervated by the pregnant decisions that seem to weigh down his every action. A droll and melancholy comedy of delayed reaction that captures the loneliness of the corner store and video arcade, _Rapado_’s poignant rendering of directionless youth merits comparison to the late, desolate masterworks of Aki Kaurismaki. —Harvard Film Archive
Martín Rejtman (born 1961 in Buenos Aires) is an award winning Argentine film producer, film director, and screenplay writer. He works in the cinema of Argentina.
Rejtman studied filmmaking at New York University, where he had to make one short per week and had to shoot with what was available.
At NYU he established a mode of production embraced by many other young Argentine filmmakers, both before and since: that is, the art of working with a small budget.
Rejtman uses a minimalist style when making films. He said, “When I made Rapado, I felt that Argentine cinema had too much dialogue, and bad dialogue at that. I hate adornments, I hate artifice, I hate anything that’s unnecessary, because there really is nothing beyond the screen.”
Films As Director
Doli vuelve a casa (1986) (short)
Sistema español (1988) (short)
Rapado (1992)
Silvia Prieto (1999)
Los guantes mágicos (2003… read more
"I tried to show things that Argentina cinema wasn’t showing. If everything was explained too much, I chose to be less discursive; if there was a lot of talking, I chose to talk less; if it was clear that there was no narrative system, that every scene was filmed as it came, I tried to be rigorous and to tell the story in a specific way. But it wasn’t on purpose that I said: 'I’m going to hide the information from the spectator and let him rack his brain thinking about it,' because everything that happens [in my films] is very simple. Maybe it requires a little more participation from the spectator in the sense that not everything is stated in the dialogue and he/she has to let each scene develop and end in order for a new one to begin, so that the story can be pieced together." —Martín Rejtman
Through lifeless city streets late at night, a young man named Lucio rushes on his motorcycle into the electric gloom. He stops and his passenger, the man whom he was giving a lift, pulls out a knife… read review