Movie Review: In 'A Poet,' a Colombian farce of literary failure and stubborn belief
- - Movie Review: In 'A Poet,' a Colombian farce of literary failure and stubborn belief
JAKE COYLEJanuary 30, 2026 at 1:36 AM
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1 / 3Film Review - A PoetThis image released by 1-2 Special shows Ubeimar Rios in a scene from "A Poet." (1-2 Special via AP)
In SimĂłn Mesa Sotoâs âA Poet,â OscĂĄr Restrepo (Ubeimar Rios) is a failed Columbian writer who keeps a photo of the author JosĂ© AsunciĂłn Silva above his mantle. Silva died at age 30, and even OscĂĄr would admit his own career would be a lot better if he had died young, too.
Mid-aged in MedellĂn, OscĂĄr is unemployed, divorced and living with his mother (Margarita Soto). His case isnât one of misunderstood genius, either. OscĂĄr is prone to self-made disaster. A more successful friend, Efraine (Guillermo Cardona), calls him âa walking problem.â
âYouâre a poem,â Efraine tells him. âA pretty sad one.â
But in the pantheon of sad-sack protagonists, OscĂĄr is a triumph. Rios, a nonprofessional actor who squints behind thick glasses and whose arms hang stubbornly low from his hunched shoulders, creates in OscĂĄr a figure of farcical perfection: a tortured artist, equal parts comedy and tragedy.
Thereâs little thatâs lyrical or beautiful about OscĂĄrâs life. This is a guy who, on a rare visit to his teenage daughter (Alisson Correa), asks if he can borrow $10. At the same time, OscĂĄr is a stout believer in the grandest ideals of art. Give him a drink, or a microphone, and heâll soon be rhapsodizing about the power of âpoesĂa.â For someone one step from the gutter, heâs comically high minded.
But itâs been decades since he was published. He declares: âIâm a poet.â His sister corrects: âYouâre unemployed.â Yet OscĂĄr manages to land a job teaching at a local high school. The students mostly laugh at him, but OscĂĄr believes one, a soft-spoken young woman named Yurlady (Rebeca Andrade), shows tremendous potential. Redemption for OscĂĄr is, maybe, at hand.
Yurlady, herself, doesnât have any real literary ambitions. But OscĂĄr, resolving to mentor her, helps her apply to Poetry Viva, a workshop for young writers run by Efraine, a smooth-talker acclaimed for his social issues writing. Heâs the central foil to OscĂĄr â a pompous but savvy achiever who urges Yurlady not to submit her simple from-the-heart poems but something about racism or poverty that will win over liberal-minded European judges.
In this, Sotoâs film is an ironic allegory about art worlds beyond poetry. âA Poetâ premiered at last yearâs Cannes Film Festival, winning an award in the Un Certain Regard section. Soto first broke out in Cannes with a prize-winning short in 2014. In the intervening years, as a Colombian filmmaker, heâs surely encountered some stereotypical expectations. The film industry would no doubt be more welcoming to, say, a cartel tale from Soto then a MedellĂn-set, Woody Allen-like farce about an unsuccessful poet.
But while âA Poetâ might remind you of some other films â one would be Cord Jeffersonâs âAmerican Fictionâ â it is, like OscĂĄr, steadfastly its own thing. Filmed on grainy 16mm, itâs even rough and dirty around the edges, as if the movie is wearing its protagonistâs clothes.
But if Sotoâs film is loose and gritty, its satire is remarkably precise. This is a farce of creative life where the only pure artistic intention is a joke. Success belongs to hypocrites like Efraine. Yurladyâs working class family sees only a chance for money. But OscĂĄr, for all his foolishness, is at least uncompromising. He's wrong about almost everything, except what really counts.
âA Poet,â a 1-2 Special release in theaters Friday, is unrated by the Motion Picture Association. In Spanish with English subtitles. Running time: 124 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ