Time Out says
Vincent Gallo lends his suitably spikey presence to the title character, Tetro, a hobbling, boho literary genius in exile. Holed up in Buenos Aires with doting partner Miranda (Maribel Verdú), he works as the lighting operator for a saucy tinpot burlesque show while trying to escape the Freudian nightmare of his upbringing. A visitation from his baleful younger brother Benny (newcomer Alden Ehrenreich – solid, if hardly a revelation) forces Tetro to attend to his severely knotted family ties as well as make a decision about what to do with the unfinished book that’s lurking on top of the wardrobe.
‘Tetro’ is a movie filled with splashes of brilliance rather than being a plain brilliant movie. Visually, it’s a joy to behold, with every monochrome frame (with the odd colour segment thrown in) arranged and lit with the eye of an old master. As a story, though, it doesn’t deliver the goods. A neatly illusive build-up segues regretfully into a series of soap-opera-like twists that appear to be entirely at the service of Coppola’s own grandiose philosophical intimations, which mainly regards the personal gains to be made from art and family. An imperfect gem, then, but a keeper for sure.
Release Details
- Rated:15
- Release date:Friday 25 June 2010
- Duration:129 mins
Cast and crew
- Director:Francis Ford Coppola
- Screenwriter:Francis Ford Coppola
- Cast:
- Vincent Gallo
- Alden Ehrenreich
- Carmen Maura
- Klaus Maria Brandauer
- Maribel Verdu
Discover Time Out original video