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Epitafios - The Complete First Season
 
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Epitafios - The Complete First Season (2005)

Starring: Julio Chávez, Paola Krum Director: Alberto Lecchi, Jorge Nisco Rating: NR (Not Rated) Format: DVD
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)

List Price: $59.98
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Epitafios - The Complete First Season
91% buy the item featured on this page:
Epitafios - The Complete First Season 4.3 out of 5 stars (23)
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Product Details

  • Actors: Julio Chávez, Paola Krum, Cecilia Roth, Antonio Birabent, Villanueva Cosse
  • Directors: Alberto Lecchi, Jorge Nisco
  • Writers: Marcelo Slavich, Walter Slavich
  • Producers: Adrián Suar, Diego Andrasnik, Fernando Blanco, Luis Peraza
  • Format: AC-3, Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Language: Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo)
  • Subtitles: English, Spanish
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
  • Number of discs: 5
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Studio: Hbo Home Video
  • DVD Release Date: August 29, 2006
  • Run Time: 780 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000G1R4TI
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #24,256 in Movies & TV (See Bestsellers in Movies & TV)

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    #1 in  Movies & TV > Television > Horror > Epitafios
  • For more information about "Epitafios - The Complete First Season" visit the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

From Buenos Aires with dread comes Epitafios, a devastating, gag-inducing, and gut-wrenching 13-part miniseries, produced by HBO for Latin America, but was such a sensation it earned a subtitled American broadcast and DVD release. Those creepily compelled by Se7en, or who breathlessly awaited the unmasking of the Carver on Nip/Tuck will be hooked into Epitafos from first corpse to last (the body count is substantial). Things get off to a shocking start with the discovery of the gruesomely dismembered body of a former professor, who five years earlier had taken hostage four students, all of whom died when a rescue attempt went horribly awry. Now, someone is methodically killing those who had a direct and indirect connection with the tragedy. Reluctantly pulled back on to the case is psyche-scarred Renzo (Julio Chavez), the suicidal and self-pitying former cop who blames himself for the students' deaths. He quit the force and is now a cab driver. His old friend on the force, the grizzled Benitez (Lito Cruz), recruits him to help when two tombstones bearing their names are found at the crime scene. Sharing Renzo's tombstone is the name of beautiful psychologist Laura Santini (Paolo Krum), who was treating the professor when he flipped out, and with whom Renzo, her patient, had fallen in love.

It gets creepier. Much creepier. In advance of each murder, the killer sends the police fiendishly enigmatic tombstone epitaphs (hence the title), among them: "Here lies he who never should have trusted his best friend" and "Here lies he who turned deception into a game." He also seems to be everywhere and to be able to anticipate his pursuers' every move. He leaves an ominous message for Laura on her child's balloon before she picks him up at school. He ignites the outlines of body drawings on the street where one of his victims will be passing. The despair in Epitafios is palpable. It makes Se7en look like the feel-good movie of the century. It also thinks nothing of pulling the rug out from under viewers expecting major characters to survive the miniseries, or introducing others, such as homicide investigator Marina (Ceclia Roth), with very heavy emotional baggage of their own. But you won't be able to look away, even when you're terrified of what you'll see next. --Donald Liebenson



Product Description

The critically-acclaimed suspense drama follows the cat-and-mouse game between a police officer (Julio Chavez) who is looking for a reason to live and a psychotic serial killer (Antonio Birabent) bent on revenge, who has found a reason to kill.

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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (23 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding Latin American crime drama... Marred by non-anamorphic DVD from HBO, September 17, 2006
This outstanding miniseries marks HBO's first foray into Latin American TV. It centres around a serial killer who is methodically killing off people connected to a botched hostage rescue at a local Buenos Aires highschool five years earlier. Ex-detective Renzo Marquez (Julio Chavez) was responsible for the disaster in which four 16-year old hostages burnt to death. Someone is now seeking revenge. The story revolves around the retired detective and his ex-lover, the psychiatrist Laura Santini (Paola Krum). Santini had the misfortune of acting as hostage negotiator during the seige. Both are the main targets but the killer delights in a sadistic cat-and-mouse game as he spares them while despatching other victims in increasingly bizarre and gruesome ways, accompanying each with a tombstone carved with a cryptic epitaph outlining their supposed crime, hence the title.

Made in Argentina with an excellent all Spanish-speaking cast, this was originally intended for broadcast only in Latin America. Its popularity and critical acclaim led to its inclusion on the US HBO-Latino channel. Now it is being released on DVD, suitably subtitled for non Spanish-speaking Americans. The miniseries consists of just 13 45-min-long episodes. It is unlike anything you've seen on TV before. It is unremittingly dark. And it is gruesome. In the opening episode, the first victim is dismembered, with his body parts strewn artistically around the house. The violence is almost always off-camera. We are shown the gory after-effects. It is definitely not for the squeamish. The identity of the killer is made known by the third episode but the tension never flags and builds inexorably to a very satisfying if dark climax. There is no happy ending. Some have described it as bleak but there is a ray of defiant optimism at the end which for me just manages to dispel the utter darkness.

This is an altogether excellent production, with a literate and suspense-filled script, complex, believable characters, and a superb all-round cast. However the HBO DVD is marred by the absence of anamorphic enhancement (not enhanced for widescreen TV). It is presented in its original 16x9 widescreen aspect but letterboxed into a standard 4x3 frame. Although the picture quality is very good for a non-anamorphic transfer, it still falls below what is possible with suitable anamorphic enhancement. Considering the high asking-price, HBO should have done better. The original Spanish 2.0 Dolby Surround track is provided. There is satisfyingly deep bass, heard best in Ivan Wyszogord's darkly throbbing score, with its haunting soprano line soaring above the gloom. Dialogue is crystal clear and the operatic exerpts are reproduced very accurately. (The killer has a penchant for Bizet's Carmen, especially for the Habanera - you hear it in every episode - if he's not listening to it, he'll be whistling it). Optional Spanish and English subtitles are provided. The only Extra is an 11-minute "Behind the Scenes" featurette in Spanish with optional English subtitles. HBO has gone out of its way to make this DVD accessible to both Spanish and English audiences. The box-art, the DVD menus and submenus, and the plot-summaries for each episode, are all available in both Spanish and English.

Note: Being a TV series, it is not rated. If this were a film submitted to the MPAA, it would likely receive an R-rating for "disturbing violence, offensive language, nudity and sexual situations."
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27 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mesmerizing Crime Series From Argentina, June 22, 2006
By Cinephiliac (Los Angeles, CA) - See all my reviews
  
I was a little hesitant before initially viewing the 13-part Argentinean miniseries import, "Epitafios" (Epitaphs). There had been so much attendant hyperbole that I thought there was no way it could live up to its buzz. I am pleased to say that I couldn't have been more wrong.

Renzo Marquez (Julio Chavez) is an emotionally numb, part-time taxicab driver who left the police force five years earlier. Guilt-ridden and traumatized after a literal misstep on his part led to the horrific deaths of four 16-year-old students taken hostage by a mentally unbalanced professor, Renzo is living a marginal existence--with no interests and few friends, caring only for his wheelchair bound father in his spare time. Renzo is drawn back into the case that ended his fast track career when he is contacted by his former commanding officer, Captain Benitez (Lito Cruz). Upon receiving an anonymous phone call, Benitez is directed to an abandoned house that is the scene of an elaborately staged murder. In the backyard, the police discover two shallow open graves with headstones. The epitaph on one of the headstones contains Benitez's name, and the other has Renzo's name sharing space with that of Laura Santini (Paola Krum), the psychiatrist who had been called in as a consultant on the student hostage case before the whole thing went pear-shaped.

Meting out almost Biblical retributions to anyone directly or indirectly involved in the events leading up to the student deaths, the killer sees himself as an avenging angel delivering postponed justice. He leaves the bodies of his victims displayed with grotesque, almost Grand Guignol, theatricality. The killer also leaves drawings of headstones with cryptically worded epitaphs--clues to the identity of his next victim--at each new murder scene. As Renzo tries to figure out the identity and motives of the killer, potential suspects become victims, trails evaporate and red herrings appear everywhere. (The complete insanity of the killer is manifested in the emotionally charged (albeit 1-sided) conversations that he has with his "girlfriend," a huge hairy grey rat that he keeps in a cage! Pouring out his heart to his "rodent accomplice," every squeak is seen as an affirmation or a criticism. It would be hilarious--except that it is so pitiable.)

What really sets this series apart from most crime shows/police procedural mysteries is that it takes its time developing its characters. Even minor characters--usually relegated to thinly drawn types or caricatures of types--are fleshed out and given a complexity that engages the viewer's interest and emotions. You slowly come to care about these deeply flawed people whose lives and careers were destroyed as a result of the failed rescue attempt. There isn't even one wasted scene in this intense film series and the pacing is frantic and harrowing.

The music (which reminded me of the moody and emotionally rich film scores of Bernard Herrmann) and the cinematography are both really gorgeous and highly atmospheric. This is a truly engrossing film series, with first-rate acting, but may not be for the squeamish as there is a great deal of graphic violence and its aftermath. Some nudity and explicit sexuality. In Spanish, with English subtitles.
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great HBO series ... that never aired on HBO, August 17, 2006
By Flipper Campbell (Miami Florida) - See all my reviews
  
"Epitafios" is more violent than "The Sopranos," stranger than "Carnivale" and features characters at least as damaged as the "Six Feet Under" undertakers. But for El Norte viewers with savory tastes and strong stomachs to match, "Epitafios" is a seriously cool find. Think "Seven" churned with "Millennium," "The Wire" and a dash of telenova passion.

Driving the narrative is the story's brilliant young psychopath, Bruno (Antonio Birabent). He's an evildoer pulled from the same Jungian well as Hannibal Lecter -- only meaner and better looking. His obsessions include torture as an art form and Bizet's "Carmen." He's kind to corpses and his pet rat. He can't be stopped.

There's one featured murder per episode, with plenty of collateral damage. "Epitafios" specializes in making its audience care about key characters, and then ripping them away. Part of the show's voodoo is its deep reserve of ways to creep out viewers.

Good as it is, "Epitafios" isn't consistently up to first-rate horror/thriller standards -- the writing goes brain-dead here and there; the romance feels like daytime TV; the villain eventually comes off like a gay Terminator. The series' momentum sags in the middle, as the filmmakers struggle with the task of making what is essentially a 13-hour horror film.

Nevermind the quibbling. If you've read this far, you gotta check it out. "Epitafios" comes guaranteed as addictive, creepy as hell and intellectually challenging. It remains true to its grisly aesthetic to the final stop.

Side notes: The Season 1 reference seems optimistic, as Argentine co-producer Pol-ka appears unlikely to revive the series.) As to the audio questions below: Buy with confidence. It's in Spanish. Period. English subtitles. No dubbed version. More than adequate sound and images.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars interesting but flawed
I was drawn to this series because I have suddenly become fascinated by Buenos Aires and Argentina.
"epitafios" seems to have a desire to up the ante on the violence and... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Raoul Vernet

5.0 out of 5 stars Up there with the best of HBO
This series is absolutely riveting, the acting is excellent, I dare you to watch only one! I couldn't stop watching. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Edmund De Santis

5.0 out of 5 stars Just Perfect
Epitafios is an argentinian masterpiece. Concise, brutal, intelligent. Unpredictable. Fascinating script. Excellent actors. I just can't stop seeing it.
Published 5 months ago by Silvia Belintani

5.0 out of 5 stars Dexter meets Six Feet Under, Argentina Style
Since half of the reviews in here already describe the plot, I'll jump directly to my series review. This series is excellent. Read more
Published 9 months ago by SIBIE

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, but with the caveat...
...this series is not for the squeamish. Think of it as "Hitchcock meets Jack the Ripper at Sweeney Todd's for a bar-b-que" and you'll get the idea...
Published 17 months ago by A. J. Stavsky

2.0 out of 5 stars A WATCH WITHOUT THE WORKS (DISAPPOINTMENT)
This miniseries, clinically recycled from the mutilated body parts of its betters, is only just watchable. Read more
Published 21 months ago by MOONWALKIN'

5.0 out of 5 stars Love this series
Though I am not Latin, I love this series! It will intrigue you from the start with its thick plots and unique settings. Well done!
Published 22 months ago by S. M. Taylor

5.0 out of 5 stars A phenomenal original series that's unique and exciting
See other reviews for details about this series. It's awesome! Seriously, Hollywood should fire its striking writers (since the product they produce lately is pretty amateurish... Read more
Published 23 months ago by GraBird

5.0 out of 5 stars Great script better cinema
Although Epitafios is TV, I would consider it as good cinema. It is compeling and keeps you on in suspense until the end. Read more
Published on August 8, 2007 by J. Canas

4.0 out of 5 stars Not enoughfios of Epitafios
This was a series that was not easy to get hold of so was very glad to get it from Amazon. An excellent little crime thriller that had you guessing all the way. Read more
Published on July 27, 2007 by R. King

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