Screened as part of NZIFF 2002

Nine Queens 2001

Neuve reinas

Directed by Fabián Bielinsky

Argentina In Spanish with English subtitles
115 minutes 35mm

Director, Screenplay

Producer

Pablo Bossi

Photography

Marco Camorino

Editor

Sergio Zottola

Music

César Lerner

With

Ricardo Darín (Marcos)
,
Gastón Pauls (Juan)
,
Leticia Brédice (Valeria)
,
Tomás Fonzi (Federico)
,
Ignasi Abadal (Vidal Gandolfo)

Festivals

New Directors/New Films, Toronto, London 2001

Elsewhere

"An experienced grifter takes a younger confrere under his wing for the theft of a block of stamps called the ‘Nine Queens’ in Fabian Bielinsky’s caper-within-a-caper debut film, which runs as smoothly as a well-rehearsed con. The premise, indeed the whole movie, is held together only by surface tension, yet that tension is skillfully and humorously maintained throughout. The pace is brisk and the rhythm unforced, and the dialogue jogs companionably alongside the plot’s snaky twists and turns. The actors are charismatic, particularly Ricardo Darín as the pro whose blend of charm and desperation plays well against the wide-eyed earnestness of his partner Gastón Pauls and the squadron of street-smart characters the two pick up along the way. Widely hailed in Argentina as proof that homegrown products can compete with American studio fare, Nine Queens’ ability to breathe new life into old Hollywood chestnuts lies paradoxically in its Argentinean rhythms and savvily casual-looking locations, from corner bodegas to luxury high-rises." — Ronnie Schieb, Chicago Reader 

"David Mamet might kill for a script as good as the one that fuels Nine Queens. A seductively structured and superbly acted suspenser that breathtakingly piles swindle upon scam without giving away the game until the very end, Fabien Bielinsky’s debut feature has been the biggest smash in its native Argentina in at least a decade… Longtime assistant director Bielinsky got the chance to make his film when he bested 350 competitors in a screenplay competition for which the top prize was production funding for the winning script. It is the scenario that gives this thoroughly assured work its greatest distinction, but in every respect Bielinsky reveals the instincts of a filmmaker keen to please through clever dramatic manipulation that respects, rather than insults, the audience’s intelligence." — Todd McCarthy, Variety