Demetrio Rota, a garbage collector from Buenos Aires, sleeps in the
afternoons and assembles puzzles at night before leaving for work. His
daily life is mediocre and he keeps his balance through sheer
exhaustion. However, through the puzzles, Demetrio inspects and sorts
through his own memories. At the end of the journey through his history,
the present seems to devour him, until he's left with only the emptiness
of himself and his daily misery.
A parable of memory and deterioration, Andrés Neuman's Bariloche
juxtaposes the astonished memories of youth with a skeptical conscience;
the impossible idealization of nature or first love with the moral and
physical suffocation of the big city; being uprooted with returning to
one's origins, with a language fascinated by both lyricism and
rottenness.