
Javier Milei praised the new film Homo Argentum and criticized Kirchnerism
The president stated that the film exposes the 'grotesque spectacle that the kukas represent today.'
After it became known that the President of the Nation, Javier Milei, had screened the film Homo Argentum, starring and produced by Guillermo Francella, for deputies and members of his Cabinet, the president addressed the topic on his X account, where he emphasized that the film exposes the "grotesque spectacle that the kukas represent today."
Under the title "Homo Argentum: cognitive dissonance in the woke heart," Milei published three paragraphs of a particular political and social reflection, inspired by the way the film directed by Mariano Cohn and Gastón Duprat portrays what could be interpreted as "Argentinity."
"The increase of mental parasites in the mind of the progressive leads to greater hatred and to the plaintive howls of that army of zombies (thermos with octopus heads)," the President stated.

He also added: "Anyone who has had the fortune to read the principle of revelation and understand it should be grateful for the grotesque spectacle that the kukas and the woke progressives are giving us today in front of Homo Argentum. It shows them exactly as they are!"
In that context, Milei maintained that "the film hurts them a lot because it presents them with a mirror in which everything they are comes to light... it's almost unnecessary to say how much the success of a film without State funding hurts them, since it shows many in the field (and related areas) as total and absolute failures."
Last Friday, the President gathered his Cabinet at Casa Rosada for four hours to address economic issues, but he also took the opportunity to screen Homo Argentum as an example of the cultural battle he is promoting.

Days earlier, he had repeated the dynamic with deputies at Quinta de Olivos. According to some of the attendees interviewed by Infobae, after explaining the guidelines of his economic plan, Milei proposed to them "to go eat or watch Francella's film before its premiere." The legislators chose the screening and shared "a pleasant moment" that lasted until 2:30 a.m.
The film Homo Argentum is characterized by a particular format: 16 independent stories, each between one and twelve minutes, in which Francella plays completely different characters, from an internationally renowned filmmaker to a dollar vendor on Florida pedestrian street, including a middle-class father, a millionaire, a slum priest, and even a president.
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