Lola Arias, who is also a filmmaker, said that despite the
differences over the sovereignty of the islands, the play allows
audiences and the former soldiers to listen to both sides of the
dispute.
Britain won the war, but Argentina still claims the islands,
which it calls the Malvinas. During Argentina's two-month war to
reclaim the Falklands in 1982, some 255 British troops and about
650 Argentine soldiers were killed.
After five years of work and 70 interviews with veterans from
both sides of the conflict, Arias chose six men who would go on
to become the main characters in the play "Minefield" and the
film "Theatre of War," where they recall their experiences in a
scripted play considered documentary theater.
"Minefield" premiered in Buenos Aires last month and opens in
Japan, Italy, Spain and France this month. The movie will be
presented at the BFI London Film Festival in October.
"I think that this project can only be done now precisely
because those 36 years have passed and there is a perspective
that allows us to see the effects of the war because, in
reality, both the work and the film are not about the war
itself, but about what the war does to people," Arias, 42, told
Reuters.
In the film and play, the three Argentine and three British
veterans tell their stories, read letters, play in a rock band,
recreate painful moments of war, and even attend therapy. The
film's final scene depicts an attack, with younger actors
playing doubles of the veterans.
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"The idea of that ending was so one could really see that what the
war took away is youth, innocence and beauty," said Arias.
Although the UK veterans spoke no Spanish and their Argentine
counterparts did not speak English, the former soldiers said they
understood each other and found they had more in common than
differences. The process proved healing, they said.
"What matters the most is being able to tell others that it does not
matter if you agree with someone else, you can often do things with
people who think differently on some issues," said Gabriel Sagastume,
an Argentine veteran and actor.
"For us, the whole process was curative ... We found many things in
common."
(Reporting by Lucila Sigal in Buenos Aires; Writing by Cassandra
Garrison; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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