WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Comedy >

Funny Dirty Little War

Watch Funny Dirty Little War For Free

Funny Dirty Little War

A small revolution breaks out in a small Argentine town, as one group of Peronists calls they newly elected peronist a communist. The newly elected official enlists the aid of allies ranging from the town drunk to young peronists to help hold his post. What follows is a slapstick war with a serious message.

... more
Release : 1983
Rating : 7
Studio : Aries Cinematográfica Argentina, 
Crew : Production Design,  Production Design, 
Cast : Federico Luppi Ulises Dumont Víctor Laplace Miguel Ángel Solá Héctor Bidonde
Genre : Comedy

Cast List

Related Movies

Wag the Dog
Wag the Dog

Wag the Dog   1997

Release Date: 
1997

Rating: 7.1

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy
Stars: 
Dustin Hoffman  /  Robert De Niro  /  Anne Heche
Eat the Rich
Eat the Rich

Eat the Rich   1988

Release Date: 
1988

Rating: 5.8

genres: 
Action  /  Comedy  /  Crime
Stars: 
Ronald Allen  /  Lanah P  /  Fiona Richmond
Vox Populi
Vox Populi

Vox Populi   2008

Release Date: 
2008

Rating: 6.8

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy
Stars: 
Tom Jansen  /  Johnny de Mol  /  Esmarel Gasman
The Last Supper
The Last Supper

The Last Supper   1996

Release Date: 
1996

Rating: 6.7

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Cameron Diaz  /  Ron Eldard  /  Courtney B. Vance
Starter for 10
Starter for 10

Starter for 10   2006

Release Date: 
2006

Rating: 6.7

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy  /  Romance
Stars: 
James McAvoy  /  Alice Eve  /  Rebecca Hall
Traceroute
Traceroute

Traceroute   2016

Release Date: 
2016

Rating: 6.4

genres: 
Comedy  /  Documentary
Speechless
Speechless

Speechless   1994

Release Date: 
1994

Rating: 5.8

genres: 
Comedy  /  Romance
Stars: 
Michael Keaton  /  Geena Davis  /  Bonnie Bedelia
George Carlin: Life Is Worth Losing
George Carlin: Life Is Worth Losing

George Carlin: Life Is Worth Losing   2005

Release Date: 
2005

Rating: 8.2

genres: 
Comedy  /  TV Movie
Stars: 
George Carlin
The Front
The Front

The Front   1976

Release Date: 
1976

Rating: 7.3

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy
Stars: 
Woody Allen  /  Zero Mostel  /  Herschel Bernardi
Election
Election

Election   1999

Release Date: 
1999

Rating: 7.3

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy  /  Mystery
Bulworth
Bulworth

Bulworth   1998

Release Date: 
1998

Rating: 6.8

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Warren Beatty  /  Sean Astin  /  Kirk Baltz

Reviews

Konterr
2018/08/30

Brilliant and touching

More
Nayan Gough
2018/08/30

A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.

More
Allison Davies
2018/08/30

The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.

More
Deanna
2018/08/30

There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.

More
hof-4
2012/04/04

Prior to his return to Argentina in June 1973, former president Juan Domingo Perón, living in exile in Spain, summoned the left wing of his Peronist Party (Montoneros, Peronist Youth and other groups) to create the conditions that would press the military government into allowing him to come back to Argentina and to be a candidate in national elections. Since his overthrow in 1955 he had been banished from Argentina and the Peronist Party was not allowed to participate in elections.The Peronist left, especially the Montoneros, carried out their assignment to perfection creating, by means of guerrilla actions, a climate of tension and uncertainty that convinced the military that the return of Perón was the only alternative to an outright civil war.At the head of his party Perón won the elections in July 1973 by a large margin. Almost immediately he began to appoint to key government positions members of the Peronist right and of organizations like the AAA = Argentine Anticommunist Alliance. There were rumblings from the Montoneros and the left. In May 1974, in a stunning betrayal, Perón disowned the Montoneros in a public speech, in fact expelling them from the Peronist party. The speech had the (intended or unintended) consequence of encouraging the AAA, the military intelligence services and the police to hunt the Peronist left down. It was the official start of the Dirty War, which became especially murderous when the military took power in 1976, lasted until 1981 and cost 30,000 lives.Osvaldo Soriano's novel No Habrá Mas Pena ni Olvido narrates the initial stages of the Dirty War in the fictional small town of Colonia Vela. The title of the novel is taken from the lyrics of a tango sung by Carlos Gardel in the thirties and still known by heart by Argentines of all ages; it literally translates into (a place or a time where) "there will be no suffering or forgetting" and it is associated with Peron's return, that happens sometime before the action takes place. The novel can be qualified as "perfect"; it is short and to the point, intense and deeply moving.Soriano (a journalist in Jacobo Timerman's prestigious but short lived newspaper "La Opinión") took the Argentine literary establishment by storm. He was an admirer (but not an imitator) of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, and his writing style was seldom seen in Argentina outside of pulp fiction; relentless, nonstop action peppered with black humor, supported by spare, at times telegraphic dialogue. Characters come to life through their actions more than through their words. Director Hector Olivera has done a very good job of putting Soriano's novel on screen, although some of the most violent action is better described (as in the book) than shown. He is supported by an excellent cast, the best Argentine actors of the time: Federico Luppi, Ulises Dumont, Julio de Grazia and the veteran Lautaro Murúa in a short but essential role. The other actors are equally excellent.Olivera has been involved (either directing or producing) with more than fifty Argentine movies from 1951 to 2010, most of them through his own production company, Aries Cinematográfica founded with director Fernando Ayala in 1956. Most of this movies have been straight commercial fare, some box-office hits. With the profits, Olivera has been able to produce/direct quite a few quality films. A Funny Dirty Little war is one of them. See the film, then read Soriano's novel if possible in its original Spanish.

More
jotix100
2006/06/07

Osvaldo Soriano, the author of the novel in which this film is based, got his title from the lyrics of a famous popular tango. His satire was against the military regime that came into being after the second Peron government, a dark period for Argentina, indeed. Hector Olivera directed the film with great sense of style. The screen play was an adaptation by the director and Roberto Cossa.The story takes us to a small town in the interior of the country where a man, who works for the city, has been singled out as being a communist and must be eliminated from his job. The mayor, Ignacio Fuentes, a man of principles, decides to confront the bullies that are trying to impose their own values and have the support of the big man in town, Suprino, who is dead set in purging the bad element from the municipal government, even though Fuentes, is a man that has followed Peron.The confrontation turns violent as Fuentes and his loyal employees do the impossible to resist the attack Suprino, and Llanos, who is in charge of the army, start shooting with all they have. The hand of a strong man is behind all they are doing. Guglielmo, a rich and powerful man wants to have the rebels killed. There is a funny incident in which an aviator, Cervino, loads his small one engine plane with manure and flies all over the people that are fighting Fuentes and drops his "odorous" cargo.The DVD we saw recently is of poor quality. Not having seen the original print, we can't make any assessments, but the story suffers as the dark colors predominate, leaving us in the dark during some key scenes.A great cast was assembled for this film. Some of the best Argentine actors of stage and screen can be seen in it. Best of all, Federico Luppi, who makes Fuentes the best thing in the movie. Hector Bidondi is seen as Suprino. Lauraro Murua plays Dr. Guglielmi, the man behind creating the conflict. Miguel Angel Sola, Victor Laplace, Tacholas, Ulises Dumont, Rodolfo Ranni, are seen in key supporting roles.The film reflects a sad moment in the history of Argentina.

More
rsoonsa
2005/01/01

Based on a satire by novelist Osvaldo Soriano, this bitter work is also set in the author's abstract rural Argentine village of Colonial Vela in 1974, the year of Juan Perón's death, and is intended as an allegory relating to events that led to a military takeover of the government. It features Federico Luppi whose stated liberal political ideals assured that he would have a lengthy period of cinematic unemployment. Serving as microcosm in a kettle for national turmoil, perceptions of Perón held by two disparate political factions in Colonial Vela are at cross-purposes with right-wing Perónists attempting to oust a municipal clerk whom, although apolitical, is accused of being a Marxist, with a result that his superior, the town administrator (Luppi), comes to the clerk's physical defence against massed forces including the mayor, chief of police and union organizers, along with a collection of hardcore rightists. Farcical humour is employed by director Héctor Olivera, but always in company with cruel violence, disconcerting to a viewer who is not only alert to what may occur next, but also incapable of divining what that may be, thanks to excellent acting by Luppi, Rodolfo Ranni as police chief, Héctor Bidonde as head of the collective right-wingers, and indeed the entire cast is spot on the corrosive intentions of Olivera. This production was shot in the province of Buenos Aires while the ruling generals were yet in power, and was released in the midst of the election period in 1983 when leftist radicals retired the Perónists, an event that this work helped bring about, in large part due to a graphic depiction of right-wing death squads, murdered hostages and torture, being most certainly a film of seminal importance to those having knowledge of the Perónist period; an English language subtitled version is available with translation from the Castilian original being adequate, despite the clumsily created title. In all respects, this is a tightly made effort, not for fans of Evita, either the person or the musical feature.

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now