The best Argentine movies on Netflix

From mibsas we want to share some Argentine films with you

Don't know what to watch today on Netflix? From mibsas we want to share some highly recommended Argentine films for you to enjoy in the comfort of your home.

Although the original series and movies will always be Netflix's most attractive and differentiating offer, the streaming service also has a catalog of film productions with an Argentine label.

-The illustrious citizen

It was one of the great triumphs of Argentine cinema in recent years.

A dramatic comedy directed by Gastón Duprat and Mariano Cohn, winner of the Goya award for Best Ibero-American Film in 2017. It focuses on the figure of Daniel Mantovani (Oscar Martínez), a writer based in Europe and winner of the Nobel Prize for his literary work, where the setting of the stories is always the town where he was born.

-My masterpiece

This great comedy by Gastón Duprat brings together two great Argentine actors, Luis Brandoni and Guillermo Francella, to parody the art world and ironize about the value of works and dead artists. Ingenious, well accomplished cinematically, entertaining and with a dose of intellectuality.

-At the end of the tunnel

Leonardo Sbaraglia is a computer engineer who begins to hear voices through the basement walls. It won't be long before he discovers that a bank robbery is being planned under his feet. Suspense and action to Argentina, with an unexpected end.

-Black Snow

An American-style thriller. They are three brothers. One (Ricardo Darín) kills another and then goes to live in the south. Until the third one (Leonardo Sbaraglia) arrives and says "sell everything, this is a lot of money". But Darín does not want to. Just by looking at Darín's crazy face we already know how this ends. FILM

-Wakolda

Based on real events and the experiments of Josef Mengele, Lucía Puenzo brings this film with great density. Among the imposing and icy landscapes of Patagonia, the actors move with forceful performances while a story of horror, racial superiority and historical drama is woven.