The Secret in Their Eyes

This Argentinian thriller won the Best Foreign Film Oscar at the 2010 Academy Awards. It follows the interweaving personal lives of a team of state prosecutors on a 25-year-spanning manhunt.

"Recently retired Benjamin (Ricardo Darin), a former criminal-court employee, has decided to write a novel based on a rape and murder that occurred 20 years ago - a crime he believes has never been solved. He shares his intentions with judge Irene (Soledad Villamil), for whom he has long carried a secret torch and who - for reasons which soon become clear - is unsure about the idea... Flashbacks set just before the late ’70s arrival of the military junta show an Argentina already in the grip of judicial corruption. The dead woman was the young wife of Morales (Pablo Rago); the two immigrant workers arrested for the crime have clearly been beaten into confessing. Roused to action, and aided by his drunken barfly colleague Sandoval (Argentinean comedian Guillermo Francella), Benjamin sets about identifying the real perpertrator, their clumsiness generating some wonderful comic business along the way." (Variety).

no votes yet
The Talk:
Want to See It
No What say you? Yes

Rating: 5 Flicks Review:

It’s rare that a film can carry multiple flashbacks without reminding its audience they’re sitting in the cinema. But The Secret in Their Eyes, the Argentine film that won this year’s Oscar for best foreign film, manages an effortless game of cat and mouse between the 1970s and the late 90s. It’s impossible not to get caught up in this epic tale of unresolved love and despair.

It helps of course that this is a hugely gripping tale, a thriller poised on the edge of parallel stories. First is the unresolved case of a murdered young bride, the heartbroken husband who spends the rest of his life in the shadow of this devastation. The second is the unrequited love story between two former colleagues, now a judge and a state court criminal investigator, whose electrifying reunion after 25 years is entirely convincing thanks to outstanding performances from leads Ricardo Darin (as Benjamin Esposito) and Soledad Villamil (as Irene Menendez Hastings). Guillermo Francella as Esposito’s alcoholic partner adds levity to a story so deeply weighted in time and memory, as does the cynical office banter. The make-up department must also be praised for making it almost impossible to tell the actors’ real ages.

Juan Jose Campanella, best known for his work on American shows Law & Order: SVU and House, combines the romanticism of European film-making and the raciness of American police procedurals with aplomb; never does Argentina’s dirty political history interfere with the plot, except when the case is cruelly interrupted as the result of hair-ripping bureaucracy.

Ultimately, the viewer is left with the sense that time doesn’t necessarily heal wounds, that unresolved quandaries will forever shape our destinies. It’s a powerful piece of filmmaking that can so stylishly do that.

By Rebecca Barry Hill, Flicks.co.nz

User Reviews:

Press Reviews:

Release date: May 13th 2010.

We haven't received times for this movie in this location yet. However these are updated as cinemas announce them, so check back soon. Hopefully the lovely cinemas in your location will choose to play it shortly. ~Ed.