Belgrano: The Movie

November. 25,2010      
Rating:
6.2
Trailer Synopsis Cast

It focuses on the last ten years of life of the hero, creator of the Argentine flag. In 1810, Manuel Belgrano believes that it is possible to replace the royal authority - that of Fernando VII prisoner of the Napoleonic troops - with the community of virtuous men who, identified with the Homeland, fluently interpret the People.

Pablo Rago as  Manuel Belgrano
Valeria Bertuccelli as  María Josefa Ezcurra
Pablo Echarri as  José de San Martín
Guillermo Pfening as  Terranova
Mariano Torre as  Lamadrid
Paula Reca as  María Dolores Helguero
Sebastián Mogordoy as  Soldado Ebrio
Mario Alarcón as  Helguero
Alejandro Botto as  Pío Tristán

Reviews

Beanbioca
2010/11/25

As Good As It Gets

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MoPoshy
2010/11/26

Absolutely brilliant

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RipDelight
2010/11/27

This is a tender, generous movie that likes its characters and presents them as real people, full of flaws and strengths.

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Deanna
2010/11/28

There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.

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Hector Sanchez
2010/11/29

The film "Belgrano" focuses on the last ten years of the creator of the flag of Argentina. In 1810 Manuel Belgrano believes it is possible to replace the real authority of Ferdinand VII, prisoner of Napoleon's troops, by a community of righteous men who identified with the homeland, the People interpret fluently. This conviction drives the political and military practice Belgrano, which shows animated and confident. Then come the battles won, failures, disappointment, discipline, and continuous rethinking their forces and their ability to continue the quest. This TV movie recounts how the personal lives of Belgrano was behind his public life and how his patriotic virtue forced him to postpone the private, personal passion synonymous. So his love took a backseat, coy, somewhat invisible in the eyes of others. The final, inescapable ends to be resolved in your body, private space par excellence, but appears to be a metaphor for political disappointment in those years of the Revolution.

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