Jauja courts enigmatic status, but this much can be safely established: Danish officer Captain Dinesen (Viggo Mortensen) is with his daughter Ingeborg (Viilbjork Mallin Agger) in 19th-century ...
The striking, multinational co-production “Jauja” from Buenos Aires-born filmmaker Lisandro Alonso is nothing if not brazenly in the style of the great German filmmaker Werner Herzog. Beginning with a ...
Predicting year-bests in March is a recipe for eating your words, so I'll just say this: I can't imagine more than a couple of movies surpassing Lisandro Alonso's Jauja this year (it's certainly ...
There’s more dialogue in the first reel of Lisandro Alonso’s “Jauja” — Alonso’s first film made with a professional cast and a screenwriting partner — than in all four of the young Argentinian ...
Argentine filmmaker Lisandro Alonso is a hardknuckle minimalist — a leading light in what’s come to be known at global film festivals as “slow cinema.” That means his films (most famously, 2004’s Los ...
If you applauded the genre-tweaking twists of Gus Van Sant’s “Gerry” and Kelly Reichardt’s “Meek’s Cutoff,” you may have a good time (or at least an interesting one) at acclaimed Argentine director ...
There’s more dialogue in the first reel of Lisandro Alonso’s “Jauja” — his first film made with a professional cast and a screenwriting partner — than in all four of the young Argentine director’s ...
Lisandro Alonso’s textured art western “Jauja” won’t necessarily educate you about Argentina’s 19th century war of expansion against Patagonia’s indigenous peoples. But its austere long takes and ...
Viggo Mortensen rose to international fame as Aragorn in Peter Jackson’s “Lord of the Rings” trilogy. He has also garnered major critical acclaim for his multiple and complex roles, including ...
Perri Nemiroff is the 2025 Press Award winner at the ICG Publicists Awards. She's the senior producer at Collider where she hosts and produces the interview series, Collider Ladies Night, a show ...
Viggo Mortensen follows his missing daughter into an existential void in Argentinian director Lisandro Alonso's trippy 19th-century meta-Western. At the start of “Jauja,” which also reps Alonso’s ...
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