HD · HDR
El Angel
Overlook Pick

El Angel

Inspired by true events.
74
User Score577 ratings
TMDB 7.416+20181h 55mSpanish
DramaCrime

Synopsis

Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1971. Carlos Robledo Puch is a 19-year-old boy with an angelic face, but a vocational thief as well, who acts ruthlessly, without remorse. When he meets Ramón, they follow together a dark path of crime and death.

Director
Luis OrtegaFrom TMDB credits
Studio
El Deseo6 production companies
Release
August 9, 2018Released
Box Office
$10MBudget $3M

Top Cast

8 of 11
Lorenzo Ferro
Lorenzo Ferro
Carlitos
Chino Darín
Chino Darín
Ramón
Mercedes Morán
Mercedes Morán
Ana María
Daniel Fanego
Daniel Fanego
José
Luis Gnecco
Luis Gnecco
Héctor
Cecilia Roth
Cecilia Roth
Aurora
Malena Villa
Malena Villa
Twins
William Prociuk
William Prociuk
'Federica'

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
May 23, 2024

Lorenzo Ferro really does deliver well here and is pretty convincing as the curly-haired, butter-wouldn't-melt, Argentinian lad (Carlos) who at the age of seventeen already had his parent's piano stuffed full of ill-gotten pesos. His childhood within a respectable family suggested nothing out of the ordinary til he went to school and met the charismatic petty crook Ramón (Chino Darín). He is infatuated, and there's pretty much nothing he won't do to get and keep his new friend's attention. When that starts to involve his having access to guns, and cars and drugs... The rest of the film is creatively augmented historical fact as this young man discovers violence is a route to riches and success, and that leads to killing and that - well the rushes of blood to the head are addictive. You really could imagine the character delivering the communion wafers on a Sunday and smiling at the babies, yet he was really far more adept with a pistol at eyeball range. His apprehension itself only served to further fuel his desire for acclamation. The media had him on every front page and every television station. He even manages to escape - but that, too, seems little more than a publicity stunt. The production is a bit rough around the edges; the attempts to imply some sort of sexual fluidity to Carlos don't work so well, and there's too much dialogue but Ferro's performance as man for whom taking other lives meant nothing was, I felt, quite sociopathically engaging.

More Like This

Browse all