Héctor Anglada

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other
Birthday
Jan 31, 1976 (49 years old)
Death date
Mar 02, 2002

Héctor Anglada

Known For

Inheritance
1h 30m
Movie 2002

Inheritance

Peter, a young German, enters a suburban Buenos Aires restaurant; seeking only directions, he instead accidentally ends up with a plate smashing into his head, thrown by the irritable Olinda, the 60 year-old Italian immigrant owner of the restaurant. The two develop a friendship once they discover that the reasons for their having moved to Argentina are strikingly similar.

El camino
1h 45m
Movie 2000

El camino

Manuel is a lonely young man of upper middle class who lives in Buenos Aires with his mother. Due to a fortuitous circumstance, one day he discovers that his father, whom he does not know and whom he supposes living abroad, is in the country. He decides to go and look for him and on his motorcycle starts a long way south through Patagonia.

Bad Times
1h 50m
Movie 1998

Bad Times

Four independent short stories but they have in common that they happen in Buenos Aires during legislative elections. A candidate for deputy, Carlos Celestini floods the city with his image and can be seen in each of the stories.

La expresión del deseo
Movie 1998

La expresión del deseo

Two groups of marginalized people, of different generational composition, dispute the modest geography of a square, in the most perfect synthesis of Caetano's recurring theme: the confrontation of poor against poor as the atrocious symptom of the loss of political consciousness.

The Fury
Movie 1997

The Fury

The life of federal judge Raúl Lombardi and his journalist son, Marcos, changes forever when they become entangled in a web of corruption and drug trafficking involving law enforcement officers, judges, and other high-ranking officials.

Historias Breves I: Downhill
0h 11m
Movie 1995

Historias Breves I: Downhill

A man traveling in his truck on a desolate road...

Historias Breves 1
1h 49m
Movie 1995

Historias Breves 1

The film brings together the winners of the first edition of the Argentine National Film Board's (INCAA) annual public script competition, the grand prize of which is the budget to produce a short film. Eventually screened in national theaters, the omnibus film gave rise and recognition to a new generation of Argentine filmmakers known collectively as the New Argentine Cinema—a wave of contemporary filmmaking that began in the mid-1990s in reaction to decades of political and economic crises in the country.

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