He Hated Pigeons

2015
6.2| 1h20m| en
Details

Love is everything with a young man journey's from the north to south of Chile to fulfill a promise. A wistful road trip through the grieving process of a recently bereaved gay young man. Love is everything when a young man journeys from the north to the south of Chile to fulfil a promise. Being the film takes place in Chile and the partner was not only a foreigner (Canadian) and gay it echoes the past history of Chile’s many ‘disappeared’ and how ,as a person or country, one can deal with loss when no one really seems to know or want to admit what happened.

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Reviews

Boobirt Stylish but barely mediocre overall
filippaberry84 I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.
Cassandra Story: It's very simple but honestly that is fine.
Billy Ollie Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
staceypashworth I loved this film. What a blessing to have been included in this experience. Have you watched a film with a live score before? Not only is Ingrid Veninger choosing a new artist to score her film for each respective film festival, she's also limiting her screenings to festivals only. No DVDs. No streaming. So if this film is playing in your city, see it. Rozalind MacPhail live scored Veninger's St John's International Women's Film Festival's screening this October, her delicate use of flute and looping tracks perfectly balancing Veninger's meditative use of the film's Chilean landscape. Our film's hero, Elias, who travels at length to find that ephemeral "closure", is played by newcomer South American actor Pedro Fontaine. Fontaine is magnetic, his subtle ability to convey a tortured sadness impressive and matches perfectly with Veninger's restrained storytelling abilities (those of which are up there with the likes of Gus Van Sant and Wim Wenders.) See this film if you can. You will never have the chance again.
jfrizz2222 Just came home from an extraordinary experience. Ingrid Venninger's new film He HATED PIGEONS is amazing. It's wonderfully paced, impossibly beautiful, deeply moving... and totally engaging. Her star, PEDRO FONTAINE, gives a beautifully nuanced and subtle performance... a performance that the film allows time to breathe and grow. Equally impressive was the live music. I haven't had that experience in a cinema since the TIFF glory days when the old silents were making the rounds. Ingrid and her cinematographer Dylan MacLeod force one to truly confront the epic and monumental landscape of Chile... and it perfectly compliments the emotions on display. I was so so IMPRESSED. Ingrid is a national treasure....and for me personally the perfect kick in the ass.
Simon Reynolds Veninger's newest film is her finest work yet - the crowning achievement of a decade of fearless exploration. Easily missed in the excitement of her DIY, no-holds-barred process is the realization that the filmmaker has simultaneously managed to deliver a deliberate and mature cinematic vision. With an emotional restraint reminiscent of Bresson, Veninger rejects both sentimental traps and easy answers - challenging her audience to go beyond the usual suspects of conventional film structure and rewarding them with a catharsis of pure cinema poetry. Highly recommend to catch this in theaters as the score is performed LIVE.
johnaboard I cannot help but wonder who Ingrid's muse is for her work is original in every aspect. I was at the film Premier with a live orchestra and a full house who all appreciated the film. The story is one we all know - the sudden loss of a loved one and what happens to the person left behind. Dylan Macleod's work as cinematographer catches the magnificent always changing landscape of the West coast of Chilli as the young man drives south to reconcile his personal loss. Pedro Fontaine engages us and he drives to find his own truth about death and life. The story is complete. The script is honed. Ingrid has done it again on her own terms and given us a must see feature film.