The French distribution company Pathé has just released the trailer for the new film by Alejandro Jodorowsky La danza de la realidad / The Dance of Reality (pictured), which marks the Chilean director's return to filmmaking after a 23-year hiatus. The film premieres today as part in the official competition of Cannes' Directors Fortnight section.
A playwright, actor, author, musician, comics writer, and spiritual guru, in addition to filmmaker, Jodorowsky gained international fame with his cult films, the acid western El Topo (1970) and the spiritual awakening journey La montaña sagrada / The Holy Mountain (1973), which he made in Mexico.
Based on his autobiography novel of the same name, in The Dance of Reality Jodorowsky returns to his childhood town of Tocopilla in Chile. In addition to the world premiere of his newest film, Directors' Fortnight will also screen the documentary film Jodorowsky’s Dune by Franck Pavich which chronicles the failed attempt by the Chilean director to shoot Herbert's novel.
The film premiered to the press earlier today, and the first reviews are emerging. Peter Bradshaw writing for the British newspaper The Guardian calls the film "an arresting spectacle (...) a triumphant return, which mixes autobiography, politics, torture and fantasy to exuberant, moving effect."
Watch the trailer:

Follow Your Nose Films has announced the U.S. theatrical run of La Camioneta, the acclaimed debut feature by Mark Kendall, a US-Guatemala co-production. The film opens for one week on Friday, May 31 in New York City at Brooklyn's reRun Gastropub theater, and in Los Angeles on Friday, June 6 at Downtown Independent, followed by a national tour including screenings at Digital Gym in San Diego (July 2-7), at the Wexner Center for the Arts in Columbus (July 17), and the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston (September 20 and 27).
Three Latino directors are winners at the 40th annual edition of the Student Academy Awards, the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences announced today. Colombian-born director David Aristizabal from the University of Southern California won in the Documentary category with his short film A Second Chance, while Nuyorican director Raffy Cortina from Occidental College won in the Alternative category with his short film Bottled Up (pictured), and Swiss-Mexican director Mauro Mueller from Columbia University was a winner in Narrative category with his film Un mundo para Raúl / A World for Raul.
His 23-minute documentary short A Second Chance is his thesis project. The film tells the story of a combat medic who can’t adjust to civilian life following his honorable discharge and post traumatic stress diagnosis. After applying for a support dog, he looks to a rescued companion for a second chance at life.
Starring Alexander Barceló, Adrián Alonso (Under the Same Moon) and Gerardo Taracena (Apocalypto), Mueller's Un mundo para Raúl is a dramatic coming-of-age story told from the perspective of Raul, a thirteen year old boy in Mexico. Mueller's short films have played at various festivals including Hong Kong, Singapore, Huesca, Morelia, Brooklyn, Denver, Outfest, Frameline35 and have won numerous awards including twice the CINE Golden Eagle Award, Big Beach Best directing award, and IFP Audience Award.
Pablo Larraín (pictured) and Maite Alberdi were the winners of Chile's Altazor Award of the National Arts for Best Director, Fiction and Documentary, respectively. The winners were announced at a ceremony yesterday in Santiago, Chile. Larraín was nominated for his film No, and he was competing against Cristián Jiménez for his film Bonsái and Sebastián Silva and Pedro Peirano for their film Gatos viejos / Old Cats.
The documentary feature film El diario de Agustín / Agustín's Newspaper (pictured) by renowned director Ignacio Agüero was pulled from broadcasting on Chilean cable TV channel ARTV last Thursday, April 25, after it had been advertised to air as part of a series on Agüero's work. The film, made in 208, focuses on Agustín Edwards, owner of leading Chilean newspaper El Mercurio, and his ties to the Augusto Pinochet dictatorship and its abuses.