Dirty ipod video download
DOWNLOAD MOVIE DirtyJust $2.99 for a complete movie! No additional software or browser plug-ins required! You can play them for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA etc. | ||
| DIVX ($2.99) | DVD($4.99) | IPOD ($1.99) |
| Video Previews (divx): | ||
| File Name | Size: | Video preview |
| Dirty (Video Preview).avi | 18.30 MB | DOWNLOAD |
The most interesting Screenshots for the “Dirty” movie: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ||
A Funny Dirty Little War (1983)
NEW DIRECTORS/ NEW FILMS;
ARGENTINA’S ‘FUNNY DIRTY LITTLE WAR’
After the 1955 coup that ended his 11-year dictatorship, former President Juan Peron of Argentina settled in Spain, leaving behind him economic and emotional chaos, runaway inflation and a number of public works, including a huge international airport that, even at occasional rush hours, looked unused.
Also left behind was the nebulous heritage of Peronism, which, in the 16 years between Peron’s departure and return, became all things to all people. A new generation of leftists grew up to interpet Peronism as a kind of Argentine Marxism and to revere Peron for having at long last given Argentina a national identity.
The members of the Argentine right were appalled but, recognizing an opportunity when they saw it, they didn’t object too strongly. After all, it wasn’t easy to know what, if any, consistent philosophy Peron represented, especially after the death in 1952 of his political co-star and wife, Eva. This radical right realized that the first goal was to bring Peron home and, if that meant accepting the support of the radical left, so be it.
This, in turn, led to a certain amount of confusion when, in 1971, the aging dictator returned in triumph, accompanied by his new wife, Isabel, a former dancer. Isabel became Pero n’s Vice President when he was re-elected President in 1973 and his successor on his death 10 months later.
This background is necessary to appreciate fully Hector Olivera’s mordantly funny, furious, Argentine film, ”Funny Dirty Little War” (No Habra Mas Penas Ni Olvido), a movie that begins as a rather picturesque comedy of provincial manners and quickly evolves into a harrowing, satiric demonstration of the ease - and self-righteousness - with which quite commonplace ”good” people can turn murderously mean.
The film, for which Mr. Olivera won the award as the best director at last year’s Berlin Film Festival, will be shown at the Museum of Modern Art today at 6 P.M. in the New Directors/New Films festival, sponsored jointly by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the museum’s department of film. The showing will be repeated tomorrow at 3:30 P.M.
”Funny Dirty Little War,” written by Mr. Olivera and Roberto Cossa, based on a novel by Osvaldo Soriano, is set on a day in 1974, shortly before Peron’s death, in a small town called Colonna Vela, where the rickety alliance between the Peronist right and left falls completely to pieces.
The day begins much like any other. A decrepit automobile, decorated with the head of a dragon on its hood and a dragon’s tail on its rear, moves slowly through the streets while its driver, using a not-great public-address system, announces a once-in-a-liftime sale at the local department store. Ignacio Fuentes (Federico Luppi), the town’s practical, seemingly apolitical administrator, has a brief argument with Suprino (Hector Bidonde), the local Peronist party boss who has bought a van from Ignacio but hasn’t as yet paid for it.
Word comes from the capital to Suprino, through the mayor of a neighboring town, to ”root out” the local Marxists in obvious anticipation of a party power struggle after Pero n’s death. In the case of Colonna Vela, this is taken to mean getting rid of one man, a mild-mannered fellow named Mateo, who is Ignacio’s assistant at the town hall and who appears to have no personality whatsoever, not to mention any politics. He’s a polite vacuum.
Ignacio refuses to hand Mateo over to two bumbling national guardsmen, not for ideological reasons but because there are no legal grounds. The movie gathers comic momentum as Ignacio, realizing that the police chief will attempt to seize the town hall, enlists the aid of the town drunk, plus one of the two guardsmen, whose help he obtains by raising him to the rank of corporal.
The entire population begins to find the coming confrontation hilarious. The leftist members of the Peronist youth league join Ignacio, but their discipline is, initially, worse than that of a group of raw Cub Scouts. The drunk calls in his pal, a none-too-sober crop-duster, who uses his ”Snoopy” biplane to ”dust” the tiny mob gathering in front of the town hall. One thing leads to another and, by evening, real bullets are being fired, reporters are arriving from Buenos Aires, and real cigarettes are being stubbed out on a real ”prisoner of war” to make him confess.
The ferocity of the violence that erupts is not easy to watch, especially after the seeming high spirits of the events that have preceded it. The laughs die away but the essential comedy remains. At the height of the mini-battle, grossly vulgar, slapstick stratagems are put into effect. One fellow is harmlessly bopped on the head in one scene, followed by a scene in which another man is fatally detonated, all of which is, of course, Mr. Olivera’s point: the entire population has become lunatic.
Microcosms of this sort aren’t usually very effective. Everything and everybody must be reduced and simplified to fit a prearranged plan. Mr. Olivera and his associates have not entirely avoided this problem, but they have created a group of comically idiosyncratic characters whose wild behavior appears to explode naturally, given the extraordinary situation Colonna Vela is in.
The film has also been so cannily paced - and is so well acted - that there’s never much time to consider larger meanings while the mayhem is going on. Though ”Funny Dirty Little War” ends bleakly, the existence of the film itself - the fact that it could be made at all, and with such style - is ultimately invigorating. There’s reason to believe that Buenos Aires’s international airport no longer need look so eerily empty.
The Cast
FUNNY DIRTY LITTLE WAR, directed by Hector Olivera; script (Spanish with English subtitles) by Roberto Cossa and Mr. Olivera, based on the novel by Osvaldo Soriano; cinematography, Leonardo Rodriques Solis; edited by Eduardo Lopez; music by Oscar Cardozo Ocampo; produced by Fernando Ayala and Luis Osvaldo Repetto. At Roy and Niuta Titus Theater 1, Museum of Modern Art, as part of the New Directors/New Films series. Running time: 80 minutes. This film has no rating. Ignacio FuentesFederico Luppi SuprinoHector Bidonde ReinaldoVictor Laplace Commissar LlanosRodolfo Ranni JuanMiguel Angel Sola GarciaJulio de Grazia GuglielmiLautaro Murua Felisa FuentesGraciela Dufau CervinoUlisses Dumont Inspector RossiRaul Rizzo TotoArturo Maly
watch Dirty full movie
videos for download
watch videos
avi movies
Dirty ipod video download
avi movies
dvd download









