Harto the Borges

On October 4, 2011, Harto the Borges was presented at the University of Salamanca,[4] and made available to the general audience in Argentina through the On Line version of Revista Cultura Ñ, (Diario Clarin) in Buenos Aires.

[6] Harto the Borges was presented at the Festival Internacional del Nuevo Cine Latinoamericano, Havana, Cuba, 2000 and nominated for Premio Cóndor de Plata.

Borges emerges as a counterpoint to the interviewees, some of which evoke scandal and most of which cut through stereotypes and presuppositions surrounding this key figure.

The Borges that emerges from the interaction of the testimonies in this documentary surges from the heat of the debate, from the strong opinions, some certainly scandalous, most politically incorrect.

On the tenth anniversary of its theatrical release, Montes-Bradley writes an opinion column on Diario Clarín with considerations about the film in retrospective.

Montes-Bradley owns a nervous and inquisitive camera with multiple suggestive angles to explore the other side of Borges" | La Nación, [2], Buenos Aires, September 19, 2000.

"In Harto the Borges Montes-Bradley crafts a documentary as intelligent and provocative as the subject it portraits"| Clarín, "De ideas y paradojas".

Borges's tombstone in Geneva