3 reviews
so so
A low risk series
Summary
A series with a clear position, very (too) attached to the official vicissitudes of the case, but not very risky in terms of the development of its characters and the formulation of hypotheses, in a story where María Marta is the great absentee. Great performances by Jorge Marrale and Mike Amigorena. It is interesting to compare it with The Staircase.
Review
This series follows the case of the murder of María Marta García Belsunce in the exclusive Carmel private neighborhood, in the province of Buenos Aires, which occurred in October 2002 and which had enormous media coverage in Argentina.
"The following is a fictional series based on real events." This reads the presentation of each of the chapters. And therein lies the weakness of this series, which will obviously be seen very differently by Argentine and foreign viewers. So much so, that for Argentine readers I will include an annex, since they know most of the alternatives in the case.
I say weakness because, without being a judicial drama, Daniela Goggi's series focuses heavily on the case, but it lacked risk and fiction to develop its characters and explore situations and hypotheses, reducing this true crime series almost to a documentary with dramatizations. Ironically, Carmel: who killed María Marta?, the previous documentary broadcast by Netflix, was more interesting and rich in terms of its readings and edges.
The series respects the names of the entire family circle of the victim, but changes those of the other characters (the prosecutor in the case, another prosecutor friend of the family, another suspect), and this has to do with a clear position taken by the script by Martín Méndez, attached to the vicissitudes of the case and the results of the trial. Taking a position is not a defect (and less in the case of a real case), but expressed so clearly sooner rather than later, it takes away ambiguity and interest from the story, despite its treatment of the timeline.
In the manner of several modern fictions (and above all of The Staircase, a series in which it seems to inspire and perhaps pretends to imitate; I will come back to this several times) the story constantly comes and goes in time from shortly before the crime and extends over several years. In this case, the resource becomes abusive and generates confusion about in which procedural instance are those involved in the crime, in particular the main defendant.
The story gives a very important role to the two bloggers, Belu and Juana (in charge of Muriel Santa Ana and Valeria Lois) who decided to contact the accused of murder (already in prison) and prove their innocence, in the face of what they considered accusation inconsistencies. In the first instance, they are seen almost as two comic relief characters, like Cagney and Lacey of Third World, but risky and committed. Her role has some analogy with that of Juliette Binoche in The Staircase.
The series clearly exposes the unusual behavior of the family group at the crime scene and in some subsequent instances, in line with the vices of the upper class to which it belongs, a class accustomed to managing all its situations according to its will and without external interference. . But the development of these characters is very poor and seems aimed at generating only a certain type of reaction in the viewer and not layers of interpretation of the facts (as was the case in The Staircase).
The character of María Marta practically does not exist. She and her relationship with her husband Carlos Carrascosa are the great absentees of a story that did not risk exploring them (beyond a few loose comments from the characters) in a fiction based on real events (as The Staircase did in a remarkable way). ). And her activity in Missing Children (here Missing Child), is barely outlined. The role of the media and public opinion is analyzed schematically rather than critically, in a high-class crime with all the elements to generate morbid curiosity, suspicion and fuel the resentment of a vast audience at a very critical momento of the Argentine economy.
The scenes of the skills are very well done and are among the most interesting of the series, given its dramatic limitations.
Within a good cast, it is worth noting the great performance of Jorge Marrale as the widower Carlos Carrascosa, taciturn and concentrated, and the remarkable and enigmatic composition of the prosecutor "García del Río" by Mike Amigorena, who manages to create tension and gives him something of flight to a story where a rather flat realism prevails.
A series with a clear position, very (too) attached to the official vicissitudes of the case, but not very risky in terms of the development of its characters and the formulation of hypotheses, in a story where María Marta is the great absentee. Great performances by Jorge Marrale and Mike Amigorena. It is interesting to compare it with The Staircase.
Review
This series follows the case of the murder of María Marta García Belsunce in the exclusive Carmel private neighborhood, in the province of Buenos Aires, which occurred in October 2002 and which had enormous media coverage in Argentina.
"The following is a fictional series based on real events." This reads the presentation of each of the chapters. And therein lies the weakness of this series, which will obviously be seen very differently by Argentine and foreign viewers. So much so, that for Argentine readers I will include an annex, since they know most of the alternatives in the case.
I say weakness because, without being a judicial drama, Daniela Goggi's series focuses heavily on the case, but it lacked risk and fiction to develop its characters and explore situations and hypotheses, reducing this true crime series almost to a documentary with dramatizations. Ironically, Carmel: who killed María Marta?, the previous documentary broadcast by Netflix, was more interesting and rich in terms of its readings and edges.
The series respects the names of the entire family circle of the victim, but changes those of the other characters (the prosecutor in the case, another prosecutor friend of the family, another suspect), and this has to do with a clear position taken by the script by Martín Méndez, attached to the vicissitudes of the case and the results of the trial. Taking a position is not a defect (and less in the case of a real case), but expressed so clearly sooner rather than later, it takes away ambiguity and interest from the story, despite its treatment of the timeline.
In the manner of several modern fictions (and above all of The Staircase, a series in which it seems to inspire and perhaps pretends to imitate; I will come back to this several times) the story constantly comes and goes in time from shortly before the crime and extends over several years. In this case, the resource becomes abusive and generates confusion about in which procedural instance are those involved in the crime, in particular the main defendant.
The story gives a very important role to the two bloggers, Belu and Juana (in charge of Muriel Santa Ana and Valeria Lois) who decided to contact the accused of murder (already in prison) and prove their innocence, in the face of what they considered accusation inconsistencies. In the first instance, they are seen almost as two comic relief characters, like Cagney and Lacey of Third World, but risky and committed. Her role has some analogy with that of Juliette Binoche in The Staircase.
The series clearly exposes the unusual behavior of the family group at the crime scene and in some subsequent instances, in line with the vices of the upper class to which it belongs, a class accustomed to managing all its situations according to its will and without external interference. . But the development of these characters is very poor and seems aimed at generating only a certain type of reaction in the viewer and not layers of interpretation of the facts (as was the case in The Staircase).
The character of María Marta practically does not exist. She and her relationship with her husband Carlos Carrascosa are the great absentees of a story that did not risk exploring them (beyond a few loose comments from the characters) in a fiction based on real events (as The Staircase did in a remarkable way). ). And her activity in Missing Children (here Missing Child), is barely outlined. The role of the media and public opinion is analyzed schematically rather than critically, in a high-class crime with all the elements to generate morbid curiosity, suspicion and fuel the resentment of a vast audience at a very critical momento of the Argentine economy.
The scenes of the skills are very well done and are among the most interesting of the series, given its dramatic limitations.
Within a good cast, it is worth noting the great performance of Jorge Marrale as the widower Carlos Carrascosa, taciturn and concentrated, and the remarkable and enigmatic composition of the prosecutor "García del Río" by Mike Amigorena, who manages to create tension and gives him something of flight to a story where a rather flat realism prevails.
Too much flashing forward and back!
I am a sophisticated and experienced viewer of series, foreign and domestic, and am used to subtitled content.
The yellow subtitles that were embedded in the Netflix version of this series were practically unreadable because of their size and color, as well as the speed at which they flowed.
That, coupled with a literally constant switching of time- forward flash and back- made it unwatchable for me. I really wanted to watch it too, since I had enjoyed the documentary about the subject.
Unfortunately, I couldn't make it past the 4th episode.
Somehow I feel I'm not alone in this assessment!
I'm sure it's a completely different experience for a Spanish speaking viewer.
Aloha, C Thompson.
The yellow subtitles that were embedded in the Netflix version of this series were practically unreadable because of their size and color, as well as the speed at which they flowed.
That, coupled with a literally constant switching of time- forward flash and back- made it unwatchable for me. I really wanted to watch it too, since I had enjoyed the documentary about the subject.
Unfortunately, I couldn't make it past the 4th episode.
Somehow I feel I'm not alone in this assessment!
I'm sure it's a completely different experience for a Spanish speaking viewer.
Aloha, C Thompson.
- blueskystyling
- Dec 12, 2022
- Permalink