Documentary filmed in Buenos Aires that shows the importance of tango for Argentines, with dance scenes, voiceovers and interviews with professionals but also with other anonymous characters who find their form of expression in this music. The film was shot at a time of tango revival around the world.

The life of the famous tango singer Carlos Gardel, his emergence, his mother, his loves, his friends...

The members of a Buenos Aires family have three hobbies — "berretines" in Buenos Aires slang — that ...

¡Tango! follows a formula established by Carlos Gardel with films such as Luces de Buenos Aires (The...

The story takes us on a journey of tributes to the greatest bandoneon player of Buenos Aires, Aníbal...

Coffee Masters is a documentary by Miguel Kohan, produced by Lita Stantic, Gustavo Santaolalla and W...

Two unfaithful husbands have to win their wives back while they take their revenge on them by going ...

Hugo Santiago and writers Juan José Saer and Jorge Semprún move back and forth between Paris and the...

The life of the last female singer of the golden age of tango, who died at 102 years of age. Nelly O...
A singer is in love with a young woman who is being extorted by a rich rancher.

On a trip to Paris Sally meets Pablo, a tango dancer. He starts teaching her to dance then she retur...

A dangerous love affair inspires a director to create the most spectacular and boldly seductive danc...

After the mysterious disappearance of an oil well owner, one of his workers, Gerardo assumes the bus...

Romantic fantasy based on "two songs" Marina Tsvetaeva riddled melancholy fleeting meetings and part...

Newsreels, songs and films by Gardel, real scenes with events and historical figures from Argentina ...

A brief history of the emergence and artistic innovations of tango in 19th-century Argentina and Eur...

Malena, a young photographer, finds a box of family memories while helping clean her parents' house....

A cinematic portrait of the world-wide legendary Argentinian composer who changed tango. For the fir...