In 1979, on my second visit to South America, there was a
new word in the Spanish language. In Peru, I first encountered the verb travoltar, which meant to dance like John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever, an
enormous hit around the continent. Personally, I always detested disco, but
there’s no dismissing the cultural impact of that film about a working-class
kid who turns into something else when he hits the dance floor.
The word itself, so far as I know, has disappeared from contemporary
Spanish slang – like disco itself, it was a fad that flared out. It has its
legacy, though, in films depicting the social, cultural and political milieu of
the 1970s, as I learned after writing my recent post about Chilean director Pablo Larraín’s No,
the film fictionalizing the successful campaign against dictator Augusto
Pinochet in 1988.
Larraín also directed the 2008 film Tony Manero, also
submitted to the Academy Awards (it was not a finalist), which I recently
viewed on streaming video. Set in 1978, at the height (or should we say nadir?)
of disco, it’s a dark film that explores the dictatorship through the character
of Raúl Peralta (ably portrayed by Alfredo Castro), a
52-year-old Travolta wannabe who’ll do just about anything to fulfill his
fantasies.
To avoid spoilers, I won’t say anything more except that
Tony Manero is an absorbing film, set in parts of Santiago that most tourists
never see. With its gritty naturalism about Chilean society in the late 1970s,
it is not a feel-good movie.
I will add, though, that I’m very much looking forward to
seeing No when it reaches theatrical release in this country. Pablo Larraín,
who was an infant during the Tony Manero era, is the son of Hernán Larraín,
a conservative Senator from the Maule region for the Unión
Democrática Independiente (UDI, Independent Democratic Union), the
political party most closely associated with the Pinochet dictatorship. I
expect some topics are taboo during Larraín family dinners, or that there are
at least some uncomfortable silences.
App News: Argentina Travel Adventures is an Android!
Until now, my Argentina Travel Adventures app has only been available for
the iPhone, iPad Touch, and iPad, as the upper-right advertisement indicates. A
few days ago, though, ATA went live for
Android-based phone and tablets. At only US$2.99, it’s a bargain for planning
for your trip to Buenos Aires and beyond.
In related news, my Chile Travel Adventures app should be released soon on
both iTunes and Android.
Tango by the River
As announced recently,
there’s been a postponement of my digital slide lecture on Buenos Aires at Tango by the River in Sacramento, which will now take place Friday, October 26th, at 6 p.m.
The date’s getting close, though – just a shade over two weeks.
Limited to a maximum
of 50 people, the event will also include tango performances; admission costs
$10 at the door, or $8 in advance. I have spoken here several times before, and
we always sell out, so plan in advance. Signed copies of my Moon Handbooks on Argentina, Buenos Aires, Chile and Patagonia will be available at discount prices.
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