

The two old men bickering on a bench could be there in “2030, 1984, 506” or whenever, an opening title of “Strangers in the Park” tells us.
This tale is “timeless” is the message. This movie is an “I’m Not Rappaport” writer-director Juan José Campanella is a lot slower to admit.
It’s always been a talky two-hander, a very static and melodramatic “filmed play,” in this case, with the filming taking place in a Buenos Aires park.
But a lot of the comedy — old men lying, puffing up their past or having no tolerance for those who lie, the old “I’m not Rappaport” comedy sketch at its center — translates well enough. And veteran stars Luis Brandoni and Eduardo Blanco are spot-on as the two leads, elderly “strangers” who meet and bicker and recall their pasts as they do.
Antonio (Blanco) has the tremors of a very old man, one content to sit on his favorite bench, take in the air, the sunshine and the solitude as he reads his paper.
Abel — Or is it Mobutu, Leon or some other name he trots out? — won’t have that. He (Brandoni) is a colorful character with lots of indentities and “careers,” stories about Rwandan liberation, his legal work, psychiactric expertise and recruitment — in his dotage — to be a secret agent.
“‘He’s an old man,'” Abel says his recruiter marveled. “‘No one will notice him.'”
Antonio, an 80something still maintaining the ancient boiler at his apartment building, is over it when we meet these two. He’s not listening to this pathological “liar” any more.
They’re not lies, they’re “alerations,” the not-quite-mysterious “stranger” Abel shrugs. “Sometimes the truth doesn’t fit me.”
Abel lies on the fly, passing himself off as a lawyer, a police official, a shrink and a mobster as their day and evening of chat progresses.
He is, we think, a Jewish leftist of the Old School — labor and civil rights protests, “an old Polack” who moved to Argentina and agitated against the injustices and political and civil rights crimes of the past half century there.. Abel isn’t having shrunken Antonio’s timid state, nor his rosy reminiscences about the past.
“Nostalgia kills more old people than heart attacks,” he intones, in Spanish with English subtitles.
Over the course of their long day together, Abel will pass himself off as an expert in this or that, intervene in Antonio’s impending forced-retirement and eviction, lie to his concerned daughter (Verónica Pelaccini0 and enlist Antonio in a scheme to save a young damsel (Manuela Menéndez) in the park.
“All pretty girls have a glow about them,” he swoons. “Now all I see is the glow.”
“I don’t KNOW this man,” Antonio insists to any who will listen.
Brandoni — recently seen in “The Weasel’s Tale” but whose career the started in the ’60s — has the more colorful character to play, and he oozes charm as the aged hustler and teller of tall tales. I was more impressed with Blanco (“Son of the Bride,” “20,000 Besos”) grappling with the affectations of the extremely-aged, and never losing the tremors, the squint or outrage.
“Rappaport” was always just witty enough to get by, although I’ve yet to see a stage production or film version of it (Ossie Davis and Walter Matthau were in the ’96 movie) that didn’t drag drag drag. Campanella’s film is 20 minutes shorter than that one, and still never quite shuffles up to speed.
But it’s fun to realize this most big city American of plays still hits its notes in Argentine Spanish, in an Argentine park, with English subtitles — even if the characters are little more than “types,” even if the indignities and infirmities of old age vastly limit the shtick that’s possible.
Rating: TV-MA, violence, smoking, profanity
Cast: Luis Brandoni and Eduardo Blanco, with
Manuela Menéndez and Verónica Pelaccini
Credits: Scripted and directed by Juan José Campanella. A Netflix release.
Running time: 1:55
































