Argentine Cinema and Immigrant Filmmakers: The Use of Subversion in Mario Soffici’s Viento Norte

Even from the world of film’s early inception, themes of country, nation, and national identity appeared in Argentine movies shown in elite theaters and impoverished barrios. One of the first films in Argentina, La Bandera argentina (1897), for example, by the French-Argentine director Eugene Py, showcased images of the Argentine flag as well as scenes from the city center, Buenos Aires. Although the cinematography was rather simplistic, at the same time, this film explored the country, setting the stage for future filmmakers to do the same. While films like Py’s provided an accessible entry point into Argentine life and cultural identity, outside of the movie houses, not all citizens felt welcomed. The 1930s, known as the Infamous Decade, because of José Félix Uriburu and Agustín Justo’s military regimes, affected film content while placing minority filmmakers in precarious positions offscreen. The preoccupations of working class and minority audiences guided which movies they watched, at the same time, the conservative governments attempted to censor what they considered to be “lowbrow” culture. This content, like the tango and melodramas, drew immigrants and the working class to movie theaters. To combat the difficulties posed by politicians like Uriburu and Justo during the Infamous Decade, Soffici turned to mainstream genres, such as the gauchesque. His film, Viento norte (1937), a gauchesque loosely based on Lucio Mansilla’s Una Excursión a los indios ranqueles (1870), was one of his most successful productions. In Viento norte, Soffici uses Mansilla’s gauchesque narrative to reach both mainstream and marginalized audiences. Although scholars have looked at Soffici’s later films or casually mentioned his early movies in brief analyses, to date, Soffici’s Viento norte has remained largely ignored. Viento norte holds an important position in film history because of Soffici’s subversion of the gauchesque, a genre associated with nationalism and national identity formation in the twentieth century. In addition to this, analyzing Soffici’s contribution to film in this era helps further illuminate the difficulties that immigrant filmmakers faced during the Infamous Decade.

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