Adolfo Aristarain, the acclaimed Argentine director of 'Un lugar en el mundo' and 'Martín (Hache)', died Sunday in Buenos Aires at age 82, the Spanish Film Academy confirmed. His death follows those of Luis Brandoni and Luis Puenzo in a mournful week for Argentine cinema. Aristarain, who received Spain's Academy Gold Medal in 2024, leaves a legacy of films exploring identity, exile, family, and critiques of capitalism.
Born October 19, 1943, in Buenos Aires, Aristarain died Sunday at 82 in his hometown, as confirmed by sources close to him and Spain's Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences.
Before directing, he worked as assistant director on over 30 films, including for Mario Camus, Vicente Aranda, Sergio Leone, and Lewis Gilbert, and lived in Spain from 1967 to 1974.
His directing career began in the 1970s with 'La parte del león' (1978), followed by 'Tiempo de revancha' (1981) and 'Últimos días de la víctima' (1982), which defined Argentine cinema amid the military dictatorship's final years. Major works include 'Un lugar en el mundo' (1992), which won the San Sebastián Golden Shell and a Goya for best foreign film in Spanish; 'Martín (Hache)' (1997), an international success on father-son exile dynamics; 'Lugares comunes' (2002), with two Goyas; and his autobiographical final film 'Roma' (2004). He earned an Oscar nomination and, in 2024, Spain's Academy Gold Medal in his last public appearance, declaring, "Del cine nunca te retiras" (You never retire from cinema). Aristarain critiqued capitalism as "a savage system" in a 2013 interview.
Tributes poured in from figures like Griselda Siciliani, Dolores Fonzi, and Ana María Picchio on social media. The Spanish Academy hailed him as part of a generation that "lived the cinema."