The film is set in the high plains of northwestern Argentina and portrays the life of a self-pitying Argentine bourgeois family. It has received critical acclaim.
Mecha, a woman in her 50s with several teenage children and a husband, Gregorio, wants to remain looking young. To escape the city's hot and humid weather, the family spends summers at their decaying country estate, La Mandrágora. After Mecha drunkenly falls and injures herself, she is confined to her bed. She resents her gloomy Amerindian servants, whom she accuses of theft and laziness. Mecha's cousin Tali, who lives in a modest house in town with her husband Rafael, makes repeated visits with her brood of young, noisy children to escape her claustrophobic home. Before long, the crowded domestic situation in both homes strains the families' nerves, exposing repressed family mysteries and tensions that threaten to erupt into violence.
Lucrecia Martel's screenplay for the film won the Sundance Institute/NHK Award in 1999; this award honors and supports emerging independent filmmakers.[3] The jury suggested she rewrite the script to follow a more traditional structure around one or two protagonists, but she chose to retain its diffuse nature.[4]
Martel has said in interviews that the story is based on "memories of her own family."[5] She has also said: "I know what kind of film I've made. Not a very easy one! For me, it's not a realistic film. It's something strange, a little weird. It's the kind of film where you can't tell what's going to happen, and I wanted the audience to be very uncomfortable from the beginning."[6]
Production
To find the child actors for the film, Martel held 2,400 auditions, 1,600 of which she recorded on video in a garage near her home in Salta, Argentina.
Of casting Mecha and Tali, Martel said: "in Salta I didn't find what I was looking for and, instead, I saw a television programme showed to me by a woman friend who knew what I was looking for. Graciela Borges was in it and I realized I had found my character. Mercedes Morán was more difficult because someone I had very much in mind inspired that character. Besides, the character Mercedes played in Gasoleros distracted me, due to the naturalistic language television has, which is the least natural in the world. But I saw her at some point in a magazine in some photographs they had taken of her with her daughter, on holiday, and there, away from the character in Gasoleros, I realized she was the only one for my film, as Lita Stantic had already suggested."[7]
La ciénaga was shot entirely in Martel's hometown of Salta.
Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 88% of critics gave the film a positive review, based on 43 reviews, with an average rating of 6.90/10. The site's consensus reads: "Dense yet impressively focused, La Cienaga is a disquieting look at domestic dissatisfaction - and a powerful calling card for debuting writer-director Lucrecia Martel."[8] On Metacritic, it has a score of 75 out of 100, based on 18 reviews, indicating "generally positive reviews".[9]
In The New York Times, Stephen Holden called the film "remarkable", writing, "The steamy ambiance in which the characters fester is a metaphor for creeping social decay...La ciénaga perspires from the screen, it creates a vision of social malaise that feels paradoxically familiar and new."[10] Critic David Lipfert also liked Martel's various sociological messages and metaphors, and said he believed the "New Argentina Cinema" was moving beyond the themes related to the military dictatorship period of the late 1970s and early 1980s. He wrote: "[Martel's] intense, in-your-face portrait of a dissolute middle class lacks the usual justifying criminal context. Martel simply holds up a mirror to Argentine society, and the result is devastating. Instead of creating an allegory with archetypes, she shows characters that are all too real. When still, her camera is low and close as though we were right on top of the actors."[11]
When the film opened in New York City, Amy Taubin of The Village Voice wrote: "Martel's La ciénaga is a veritable Chekhov tragicomedy of provincial life. Making a brilliant debut, Martel constructs her narrative from quotidian incidents, myriad comings and goings, and a cacophony of voices competing for attention...[i]n a debut feature that's assured in every aspect, Martel's direction of the younger members of her cast is particularly notable."[12]
According to review aggregator They Shoot Pictures, Don't They, it is the 16th most acclaimed film since 2000.[13]
Havana Film Festival: Best Actress, Graciela Borges; Best Director, Lucrecia Martel; Best Sound, Hervé Guyader, Emmanuel Croset, Guido Berenblum, Adrián De Michele; Grand Coral - First Prize, Lucrecia Martel; 2001.
Toulouse Latin America Film Festival: French Critics' Discovery Award, Lucrecia Martel; Grand Prix, Lucrecia Martel; 2001.
Berlin International Film Festival: Golden Berlin Bear, Lucrecia Martel; 2001.
Argentine Film Critics Association Awards: Silver Condor; Best Art Direction, Graciela Oderigo; Best Director, Lucrecia Martel; Best Film; Best Original Screenplay, Lucrecia Martel; Best Supporting Actress, Mercedes Morán; 2002.
MTV Movie Awards, Latin America: MTV Movie Award, MTV South Feed (mostly Argentina) - Favorite Film, Lucrecia Martel; 2002.
^Martin, Deborah (2016). "La Ciénaga: Distanciation and Embodiment". The Cinema of Lucrecia Martel. Manchester: Manchester UP. p. 32.
^Taubin, Amy. The Village Voice, "Temples of the Familiar," film review, October 3–9, 2001.
^Telegraph. Film review and interview with Martel, October, 2001.
^Monteagudo, Luciano (2002). "Lucrecia Martel: Whispers at Siesta Time". In Bernades, Horacio; Lerer, Diego; Wolf, Sergio (eds.). New Argentine Cinema: Themes, Auteurs and Trends of Innovation. Buenos Aires: Ediciones Tatanka. pp. 69–78. ISBN9789879972830.