''Boogie'' ( es, Boogie, el aceitoso) is a
2009
File:2009 Events Collage V2.png, From top left, clockwise: The vertical stabilizer of Air France Flight 447 is pulled out from the Atlantic Ocean; Barack Obama becomes the first African American to become President of the United States; 2009 Iran ...
3D Argentinian adult-animated action-
thriller
Thriller may refer to:
* Thriller (genre), a broad genre of literature, film and television
** Thriller film, a film genre under the general thriller genre
Comics
* ''Thriller'' (DC Comics), a comic book series published 1983–84 by DC Comics i ...
black comedy film, based on the Argentine character
Boogie, the oily by
Roberto Fontanarrosa, and directed by Gustavo Cova. The voices of main characters Boogie and Marcia were performed by
Pablo Echarri
Pablo Daniel Echarri (born September 21, 1969) is a leading Argentine actor.
Biography
He was born in Sarandí, Avellaneda
Avellaneda (, ) is a port city in the province of Buenos Aires, Argentina, and the seat of the Avellaneda Partido, ...
and
Nancy Dupláa. It was the first 3D animated movie made in Argentina and Latin America.
[Se estrena "Boogie, el aceitoso"](_blank)
/ref>
Plot
Boogie meets Marcia at a bar, the girlfriend of the mafia Boss Sonny Calabria, who asks him if he finds her attractive. Boogie points that she is fat in a very rude manner, and leaves. Some time later Calabria is sent to trial, threatened by the existence of a mysterious witness who could incriminate him. Calabria's people try to hire Boogie to kill that witness, but as he requests too much money they decide to hire Blackburn instead, a competitor killer. Angered by the situation, Boogie decides to kidnap the witness to force Calabria to pay him. The witness was Marcia, who had changed into a thin figure after Boogie's criticism, causing Calabria to leave her and get together with another fat woman, as he preferred fat women. Marcia falls in love with this seeming hero, despite his constant violence and lack of feelings, until she finds out his true plans. She tries to escape from him, but Boogie captures her back and negotiates giving her up to Calabria.
However, after trading her in, Boogie starts feeling guilty, and decides to go back and rescue Marcia. He decides to bring her to the trial, that was waiting for her testimony, and crosses the country at high speed. During the trial, Calabria's lawyer tries to kill Marcia but Boogie shoots him instead. Sonny summons massive numbers of hit-men who have infiltrated in the scene, but Boogie starts to kill them all. Marcia, who had so far been reluctant to Boogie's violence, takes two of his guns and starts killing as well, and ends with killing Calabria for leaving her. Boogie sees Marcia, armed with guns and all covered with blood, and falls in love with her.
Three months after the event, Marcia declares in a journal that she knows nothing from Boogie ever since, and has made out her mind that probably that was for the best, and starts thinking that Boogie might be in a war zone doing what he does best. Later on, we can see Boogie in a battlefield site as a mercenary, just to watch him pointing his M16 Service Rifle right at the camera to say "There's some for you too".
Cast
* Pablo Echarri
Pablo Daniel Echarri (born September 21, 1969) is a leading Argentine actor.
Biography
He was born in Sarandí, Avellaneda
Avellaneda (, ) is a port city in the province of Buenos Aires, Argentina, and the seat of the Avellaneda Partido, ...
as Boogie
* Nancy Dupláa as Marcia
* Nicolás Frías as Blackburn
* Marcelo Armand as Jones
* Rufino Gallo as Sony Calabria
Production
Gustavo Cova was contacted by José Luis Masa, owner of Illusion Studios, who were working in a project of the film. Roberto Fontanarrosa, creator of the character in comic strips, had read and edited a provisional script.["Boogie, el aceitoso" desembarca en la pantalla grande](_blank)
/ref> Fontanarrosa died shortly after, but it was decided to go on with the project. Cova considered later that they could manage to make the transition from comic strips to movie being loyal to the character style and the style of Fontanarrosa himself. He considered that the movie would have been grotesque if it had been done with actors, but being humoristic it worked better.
The film had a cost of two and a half million of dollars.
Unlike the comic strip
A comic strip is a sequence of drawings, often cartoons, arranged in interrelated panels to display brief humor or form a narrative, often serialized, with text in balloons and captions. Traditionally, throughout the 20th and into the 21st ...
s, which are made with short jokes, the movie is not made with a series of short shots but with a big storyline. However, many of the comic strips created by Fontanarrosa were included as part of the storyline. Boogie also lacks in the comic strips a female sidekick: although Marcia does exist in such media, she's just one more of many others secondary characters abused or insulted by Boogie. The Marcia character in the film collects into a single character situations of many others.["Boogie, el aceitoso" salta de las viñetas al cine 3D](_blank)
/ref> She was also designed as a femme fatale
A ''femme fatale'' ( or ; ), sometimes called a maneater or vamp, is a stock character of a mysterious, beautiful, and seductive woman whose charms ensnare her lovers, often leading them into compromising, deadly traps. She is an archetype of ...
, despite the lack of such characters in the work of Fontanarrosa.
Box office
In Argentina, this film opened at #3 behind ''Surrogates
''Surrogates'' is a 2009 American science fiction action film based on the 2005–2006 comic book series '' The Surrogates''. Directed by Jonathan Mostow, it stars Bruce Willis as Tom Greer, an FBI agent who ventures out into the real world to ...
'' and '' El secreto de sus ojos'', earning $661,954 pesos ($125,370 USD).Argentina Box Office (October 22–25, 2009)
/ref>
References
External links
*
*
Rotten Tomatoes
{{DEFAULTSORT:Boogie
2009 3D films
2009 films
2009 animated films
Adult animated films
2000s Spanish-language films
Argentine animated films
Mafia films
Gangster films
Flash animated films
Animated films based on comics
Films based on Argentine comics
2000s Argentine films