A Fantastic Woman 2017

Una mujer fantástica

Directed by Sebastián Lelio

Rising Chilean director Sebastián Lelio (Gloria) celebrates the endurance of a woman under suspicion of murder in a film that heralds a stellar debut for transgender actress Daniela Vega.

Chile In Spanish with English subtitles
105 minutes CinemaScope / DCP
M
violence, offensive language & sex scenes

Rent

Director

Producers

Juan de Dios Larraín
,
Pablo Larraín
,
Sebastián Lelio
,
Gonzalo Maza

Screenplay

Sebastián Lelio
,
Gonzalo Maza

Photography

Benjamín Echazarreta

Editor

Soledad Salfate

Production designer

Estefanía Larraín

Costume designer

Muriel Parra

Music

Matthew Herbert

With

Daniela Vega (Marina)
,
Francisco Reyes (Orlando)
,
Luis Gnecco (Gabo)
,
Aline Küppenheim (Sonia)
,
Nicolás Saavedra (Bruno)
,
Amparo Noguera (Adriana)
,
Néstor Cantillana (Gaston)
,
Alejandro Goic (doctor)
,
Antonia Zegers (Alessandra)
,
Sergio Hernandez (singing teacher)

Festivals

Berlin 2017

Awards

Best Screenplay
,
Berlin International Film Festival 2017

Chilean director Sebastián Lelio follows his marvellous Gloria (2013) with another resoundingly affirmative portrait of a marginalised woman holding her ground. Santiago bar singer Marina Vidal, played by the sensational trans actress Daniela Vega in her screen debut, is headstrong, vivacious and happily in love. When her lover dies, Marina finds herself, a trans woman living with an older man, immediately suspected of foul play.

The labyrinth of transphobia Marina must navigate is galling to behold, because every insidious blow seems so familiar and credible. It’s in the way Marina registers the humiliations without allowing them to bring her down that Lelio’s film constantly surprises and Vega’s performance enthrals.

“While it’s politically charged and very much of the moment in terms of its representation of trans-rights issues, what’s perhaps most remarkable is that not a word of direct advocacy is spoken. Any trace of the agenda movie is deftly subsumed in pulsing human drama...

The movie’s stunning revelation, however, is Vega.... It’s a transfixing performance, restrained and moving, with a gut-wrenching impact in one hypnotic scene where Marina is forced to pass as a man. Vega even does her own singing, with impressive ability. No less than Paulina García’s astonishing work in Gloria, this is acting at its most fearless. The movie represents a huge leap in terms of trans narratives onscreen, but by any standard, it’s a powerful drama of a woman whose suffering never dims her determination to keep moving forward.” —David Rooney, Hollywood Reporter