The Post

A South American stunner

- Review

Florianopo­lis Dream (M, 107 mins) Directed by Ana Katz Reviewed by Graeme Tuckett ★★★★★

In Spanish and Portuguese with English subtitles.

Sometime in the very latter years of last century, in that brief moment in the epoch in which one could wear a Nirvana T-shirt but not own a cellphone, parents Pedro and Lucrecia and their teenagers Flor and Julian have decided to take a holiday.

They drive from their native Argentina to neighbouri­ng Brazil, specifical­ly the coastal resort area of Florianopo­lis, where, after their first choice of accommodat­ion turns out to be a grimy shack, they rent a beach-side cottage from the charming, louche and happily promiscuou­s Marco, a man who wears his speedos to dinner and makes little secret of his attraction to Lucrecia.

And, with Pedro and Lucrecia newly separated, although still sharing meals, holidays and custody of the kids, there really is no reason for Lucrecia not to indulge a summer fling. Except, life is never that simple.

And with apparently-to-be-ex Pedro also throwing himself back into the dating pool and both kids having caught the eye of a couple of toothsome locals, the stage is set for what could be a broad and funny farce of seaside sex, sun and shenanigan­s.

But writer-director Ana Katz (My Friend from the Park) has much more in mind for

Florianopo­lis Dream than a few laughs and a quick round of esconder la salchicha.

Pedro and – especially – Lucrecia (played by Argentinia­n veterans Gustavo Garzon and Mercedes Moran) are perfectly drawn characters.

Their backstory – one is a psychologi­st, the other a psychiatri­st – is never the subject of cheap laughs, but it provides a seam of gentle satire for Katz to mine.

The web of relationsh­ips, between the parents and the children, with each other and between Lucrecia and the also well-drawn Marco are all credibly and economical­ly sketched in.

There are no ‘‘life lessons’’ here, thankfully, but a small evolution of the family’s dynamic is deftly and likeably realised.

There is simply not a false note or convenient loophole in the script or anywhere on the screen.

Every choice – of casting, setting, costume, everything down to the battered brown Renault station wagon the family get about in – seemed to be perfectly and intelligen­tly chosen.

Florianopo­lis Dream is a funny, entertaini­ng and enjoyable couple of hours.

It is also an ambitious, nuanced, beautifull­y well-performed and gorgeously insightful film, convincing­ly dressed up in the threads of a farce.

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