Cool Hunting
From the crossover successes of Mexican power trio Alfonso Cuarón (Y tu Mamá También), Alejandro González Iñárritu (Amores Perros), and Guillermo Del Toro (Pan's Labyrinth), to the first film produced in Paraguay in 30 years receiving a top prize at Cannes, there's been something undeniably urgent and exciting about Latin American cinema in recent years.
Since 1997, the curators of Latinbeat have scoured the Romance language speaking countries of the Americas, procuring copies of the region's best new works, and organizing them into an annual festival presented by New York's Film Society of Lincoln Center.
This year's selections are especially diverse, running the gamut from more conventional comedies and thrillers, to austere arthouse dramas and contemplative personal essay films, offering an accurate picture of the wide variety of works produced in these Spanish and Portuguese-speaking countries. Here are some highlights of the festival, running through 18 September 2007:
Paraguyan Hammock
It was the commissioning by the New Crowned Hope Festival in Vienna that allowed the production of this first Paraguayan feature since the 1970s, a contemplative glimpse into the lives of an aging couple made up of beautifully small moments. (Pictured above right.)
Whisky
The second feature by the leading figures of a burgeoning Uruguyan cinema, this film set in an around a rundown sock factory in Montevideo displays a mastery of deadpan humor on par with the best work by Jim Jarmusch.
Pinta the Bird and Temporal
These two shorts, both revolving around pairs of children in tiny remote villages, are the first two Central American films (from El Salvador and Costa Rica, respectively) to be included in the festival; a rare chance to glimpse works from a nascent but promising region.
Four Breakthroughs from Mexicos New Cinema
This year's sidebar program revisits a handful of groundbreaking works that helped define the recent Mexican New Wave: the violently intersecting lives of Amores Perros, the adolescent malaise of Duck Season, the unsettling landscapes of Japón, and the tragic true story of Violet Perfume.
For more info on these films and others in the program, and to purchase tickets, visit the Film Society of Lincoln Center website.
by Michael Talbott
|
previous entry Keiichi Tanaami: DayDream |
next entry Rewrite Notebooks |
Now in its ninth year, the Bicycle Film Festival is bigger than ever in 2009, hitting up 39 cities worldwide and including a blowout bicycle-inspired art show called Joy Ride. Before traveling to five other major cities with the festival, four venues will host the show throughout NYC's Lower East Side and Soho neighborhoods starting next week. A group exhibition in collaboration with Anonymous...
Celebrating the classic combination of dinner and a movie, the third annual NYC Food Film Festival unites various foods and films that portray them. The chosen films vary in length, the longest at 73 minutes is Ron Mann's "Know Your Mushrooms." It follows fungi experts Larry Evans and Gary Lincoff on a mushroom trip through the woods, set to a score by the Flaming...
by Ariston Anderson An unusually solid year for the Tribeca Film Festival, the post-9/11 creation formed by Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal and Craig Hatkoff fared a much more manageable list of 85 features compared to the unwieldy slate of years past, resulting in a wealth of high quality films and events around lower Manhattan. The smaller list didn't necessarily make it that much easier...
The Tribeca Film Festival's Drive-In Series will be screening Planet B-Boy, a feature-length documentary on breakdancing. Planet B-Boy depicts the global resurgence of breakdancing through the life of a dancer in Las Vegas looking for his big break, a Korean son who seeks his father’s approval and a twelve-year-old boy in France confronting his family’s racism. From the outskirts of Paris to the suburbs...
by Tisha Leung "The Con Film Festival," a two-week, twenty-one film series of prison movies, spotlighting cons, ex-cons and other incarcerated outcasts, runs at Film Forum through Thursday, 21 May 2009. Featuring a special appearance by Dawson Brown, Acting Superintendent of Sing Sing Correctional Facility, he'll introduce tomorrow's 6:15pm show of "20,000 Years In Sing Sing" (1933). Following the screening, a Q and A...
by Tamara Warren If the best work comes from life experience, then Michel Auder married well. Or at least he married intriguing people—Viva, a Warhol superstar and photographer Cindy Sherman—who added color to his already vibrant life story. The Paris-born artist and filmmaker has done just about everything interesting in the past forty years. To prove it, he kept a diary of his days...
