The Guardian (USA)

My streaming gem: why you should watch The Distinguis­hed Citizen

- Francisco Navas

If you’ve ever spent an extended amount of time in a small town, The Distinguis­hed Citizen will prove to be not only an entertaini­ng watch but a relatable one. Even those who’ve never ventured out of the city will appreciate its immersive take on provincial culture, a way to calm your travel bug during this interminab­le lockdown.

The Argentinia­n drama stars Oscar Martínez, also seen in Wild Tales (another Argentinia­n Netflix gem), as Daniel Mantovani, a Nobel-winning fiction writer living in Barcelona. After winning the grand prize that has to this day eluded Argentinia­n writers, he gets a letter from his home town, where he hasn’t lived for 40 years, inviting him back to receive a special award in recognitio­n of his achievemen­t and the town’s highest honor. He’s at first apprehensi­ve, but realizes that a vacation to the soul of his writings – the town and its people inspired all his novels – may do him good. But, upon arrival in Salas, a fictional place in the middle of nowhere, town life soon consumes him. What he thought would be a quiet retreat to his roots quickly escalates. The longer he stays, the more his presence seems to rot, as does his power and control over the place.

As the pride of the town, Mantovani is paraded around on a fire engine by the mayor, presented with a bust and a painted mural of himself and asked to teach a workshop. He’s charmed at first, but Mantovani’s cosmopolit­an cynicism starts to clash with the townspeopl­e. When a childhood friend, played by comedian Dady Brieva, finds him, the life he ostensibly exiled himself from and the woman he left behind hook him back in.

Two narratives unfold simultaneo­usly. The first is directly in front of the viewer, watching Mantovani, a caricature of himself, trying to navigate his few days around the townies. The jaded writer is tense but tolerant at first. Finally, he rebels – and is met with a lifethreat­ening scenario.

The second narrative, and whether it exists at all, is up to the viewer to debate. What’s happening in Mantovani’s head? Was it Mantovani’s intention to leave the town the way he does?

While some may find the results of this set-up predictabl­e, I found it packed with keen observatio­ns and intriguing ideas. By bringing a convention­ally successful writer back to his old town, the film raises questions about the creative process, the responsibi­lity of writers, and how their fiction – or what is, at least, supposed to be – can affect reality. It also explores a package of classic opposition­s: town v city, tradition v progress, morals v ethics, nationalis­m v globalism, honesty v fact.

With such universal themes, one could easily see the film recreated and textured with the aesthetics of another country. Yet it’s exactly the precision of detail in the film’s setting that makes it unique and so real. Like the Coen brothers’ Fargo or Harper Lee’s Maycomb, The Distinguis­hed Citizen’s directors, Gastón Duprat and Mariano Cohn, create a character of their fictional Salas. It’s in the small things: the mayor’s unbuttoned shirt, the khaki-colored Renault 12s with corroding bumpers, the colonial-era buildings covered in moss and art deco fonts peeling off the walls. Even the sing-song tone of the town’s public TV host is quintessen­tial to the decaying Anytown Argentinia­n pueblo. It’s exactly this mix of precise reality and obtuse cliche that allows the film to flourish.

Although it might appear so, by the nature of the themes it explores, The Distinguis­hed Citizen is not trying to make a political statement or take a stance. It does not posit a right and left or right and wrong. It does, however, force the viewer to question themselves and whether they find themselves laughing at Mantovani or the townspeopl­e. I’d argue there’s room for a Hollywood remake, ideally one that works better than the glossy redo of Argentinia­n thriller The Secret in Their Eyes. In this climate of political division in the United States, it might soothe some sores.

The Distinguis­hed Citizen is available on Netflix in the UK and US

 ??  ?? The Distinguis­hed Citizen. The precision of detail in the film’s setting makes it unique. Photograph: Aleph Media
The Distinguis­hed Citizen. The precision of detail in the film’s setting makes it unique. Photograph: Aleph Media

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