Dr. Kate Forster works in a hospital in Chicago. She has had issues with relating to people in a deeply emotional level. Alex Wyler is a social developer and architect. At different times, they both lived in the same glass house on a lake built by Alex’s father. The two begin a correspondence purely on chance when Kate leaves a note in the mailbox of the lake house asking for the new tenant to forward her mail to her new address in the city. Alex gets this message, however he gets it two years prior when he himself lived in the lake house. When the two discover that they are indeed corresponding through time through the time warped mailbox, they learn more about each other. They manage to spend time together through common experiences two years apart. The more they correspond, the deeper the bond between the two. They end up falling in love. Kate has the benefit of being able to tell Alex of what happens in the future. Alex has the benefit of being able to experience things that Kate has experienced in the past. He even has a chance to meet her before she knew him. Kate devises a plan to meet in her present/Alex’s future so that they can spend their life together at the same time. However much can happen to Alex between his present and Kate’s present, two years in his future. —IMDb
Alejandro Agresti (born June 2, 1961 in Buenos Aires) is an Argentine film director and producer.
Alejandro Agresti, is best known in the United States for the feature Valentín, the story of a young boy who dreams of becoming an astronaut while attempting to better the bewildering world around him. This internationally acclaimed feature earned Agresti the Silver Condor (Cóndor de Plata) by the Argentine Film Critics Association for Best Director and Best Original Screenplay, Best Film and Special Jury Award at the Mar del Plata Film Festival, the Golden Calf for Best Director at the Nederlands Film Festival, and the Audience Award at the Newport International Film Festival.
Agresti’s other films include El Viento se llevó lo que (“Wind with the Gone”), Un mundo menos peor (“A Less Bad World”), El acto en cuestion (“The Act in Question”) and Buenos Aires Vice Versa.
El Viento se llevó lo qué tells the story of a Buenos Aires cab driver who goes to an isolated village… read more
Kind of weird, kind of enjoyable even though it isn't that great. The ending is so head scratching. Was that a plot hole? I am not so sure.