Cinema Tropical

Neighboring Films: How Recife Became the Capital of Brazilian Independent Cinema

By Bruno Guaraná*

In the past couple of years, Recife, capital of the state of Pernambuco in Northeastern Brazil, has drawn attention from the national and international film making communities. This interest reached its apex with last year’s release and worldwide critical acclaim of Kleber Mendonça Filho’s Neighboring Sounds  / O som ao redor (just made available for online streaming to Netflix’s American subscribers).

Although some reports have positioned Neighboring Sounds as an igniting factor in Recife’s scene, the film is in fact part of a large lineage of productions shot in the region in the past two decades. Recife's credits include other critically acclaimed features such as Perfumed Ball / Baile perfumado (Paulo Caldas and Lírio Ferreira, 1997), Mango Yellow / Amarelo manga (Cláudio Assis, 2002), and Cinema, Aspirins and Vultures / Cinema, aspirinas e urubus (Marcelo Gomes, 2005). Mendonça’s film, with its success and unmistakable depiction of Recife’s present environment, has helped put Recife on Brazil’s film production map.

Until recently, Recife was not on the film radar. The city makes a brief appearance in traditional Brazilian film historiography in the so-called "regional cycles" of the 1920s, which folded with the advent of sound and consequential increase in production costs that led to a re-centralization of the film production back to Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo. In 1995, new tax exemption laws provided a long-awaited incentive for the national production, enabling the rebirth of Brazilian cinema and the slight widening of the production map.

2012 marked a breakthrough in the history of recent Brazilian cinema, and neatly indicates the growing decentralization of cultural production that began timidly in 1995. In addition to having a special screening of Neighboring Sounds, the Festival de Cinema de Brasília put Recife under its spotlight by featuring four recent films from the region in its competition’s line-up.

They’ll Come Back / Eles voltam (Marcelo Lordello) and Once Upon a Time Was I, Veronica / Era uma vez eu, Verônica (Marcelo Gomes) received the prize for best fiction feature, while Daniel Aragão was awarded best director for his film Good Luck, Sweetheart / Boa sorte, meu amor. Gabriel Mascaro’s documentary, Housemaids / Doméstica, consisted of lending production equipment to middle-class teenagers to document their respective maids. The project was awarded a special prize to its characters and filmmakers.

If for the first years after the reemergence of Brazilian cinema the production in Recife was rather scattered and limited, the city now counts with a large web of film production companies. The city also boasts a number of active filmmakers whose approaches oscillate between a professional mode of production and a guerrilla, near-amateurish, style of filming. Within the Recife production —much like most Brazilian independent films— friends of friends commonly offer their time as extras, and lend furniture and vehicles for the shoot. Shoots, in turn, often run overtime, productions extrapolate their planned schedules, and producers need to deal with an overwhelming load of bureaucratic paperwork.

Yet, with all its impediments, the regional film production culture seems to have been established with a consistent practice, aided by a growing interest in exhibition, research, and critical reviews. The end results vary accordingly, and, as the Brasília film festival demonstrates, Recife has witnessed feature film production accompany its already-mature short film culture.

From the quiet documentary Raft / Balsa (Marcelo Pedroso) to the sensible docudrama Ebb and Flow / A onda traz, o vento leva (Gabriel Mascaro); from the handmade animation in Starry Day / Dia estrelado (Nara Normande) to the confrontational “quickies” made by the Vurto collective; from the comedic stop-motion horror Green Vinyl / Vinil verde (Kleber Mendonça Filho) to the award-winning experimental Wall / Muro (Tião); from the critique of beauty standards in Mens sana in corpore sano (Juliano Dornelles) to the collectively filmed critique of urbanism and gentrification in [projetotorresgêmeas], the variety of themes and approaches in short films made in Pernambuco in the past five years configures the cauldron of the Recife scene.

Three factors directly relate to the burgeoning film production scene in Recife: funding structures promoted by the municipal and state governments geared towards local film production and the decrease of costs with the advent of digital filmmaking; the proliferation of undergraduate-level film schools in Recife; and a generalized increased interest in film viewing (with cinéclubs and special programs), film criticism (with digital magazines and blogs), and filmmaking itself. Kléber Mendonça Filho appears as a key figure in this scenario. A film critic himself, and one of the few consistently active filmmakers of the earlier generation, Mendonça has helped reconfigure the city’s exhibition market by programming the most important local art film house, in addition to founding the Janela Internacional de Cinema do Recife.

The cinema made in Pernambuco, because of its current weight within the national cinema, breaks the traditional privileges of film production development in the Southeastern cities in Brazil, most importantly, Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo. What we witness in Recife is an apparent disregard for ample exhibition markets — as those aimed at by Globo Filmes — and a regionalism that makes its films immediately recognizable as Northeastern. These films demonstrate an effort to mark the local geography and culture, engendering what I like to call a “universal parochialism” that, while easily assimilated across cultures, is effectively soaked in locally flavored waters. While translating well across cultural borders, Recife films tend to remain intrinsically attached to the contemporary cultural, social and political atmosphere in which their production is inserted.

The political and economic climates in Recife could not be more propitious to the establishment of such a film culture. The growing economy of the region noticed since the Lula’s government is a felt reality in the urban centers, with an increasingly intense traffic, a wild real estate market, and a continuous process of construction (especially of residential high rises). The sounds neighboring Recife’s households don’t come only from the stacking of residents on top of one another, but mostly from the unavoidable noises of modernization and verticalization of the city.

It is from within this agitated atmosphere that Recife’s effervescent film scene emerges. The city’s social, economic, and political conjuncture has enabled an increase in the local film production, while also motivating the medium to question what Recife really needs and wants for its future.

 

*Bruno Guaraná is a filmmaker and a PhD candidate at NYU’s Cinema Studies Department.

This collaboration stems as a direct result from the Encrucijadas/Encruzilhadas Dialogues for Latin American Cinemas symposium that took place at New York University on April 19th and 20th.

Images (from top to bottom): Stills from Ebb and Flow by Gabriel Mascaro; Neighboring Sounds by Kleber Mendonça Filho; They'll Come Back by Marcelo Lordello; Once Upon a Time Was I, Veronica by Marcelo Gomes; Good Luck, Sweetheart by Daniel Aragão; They'll Come Back by Marcelo Lordello; and Starry Day by Nara Normande.

 






The Film Society of Lincoln Center's Latinbeat Announces its 2013 Line-up

The Film Society of Lincoln Center announced this week the lineup for this year's edition of Latinbeat, its 10-day celebration of Latin American cinema in New York City. Featuring U.S. and New York premieres, the 2013 festival opens with La Paz (pictured below right), directed by prolific Argentine filmmaker Santiago Loza, who is also an influential playwright in the indie theater scene of Buenos Aires.

The North American premiere of La Paz tells the story of Liso, a young man who emerges from a psychiatric institution and tries to re-adapt to daily life in the universe of his middle class family and neighborhood.

“The notion of Latin American cinema is changing rapidly, as is Latin America itself; co-productions amongst countries within the region now abound, as support from outside countries continues,” says Film Society of Lincoln Center Programmer, Marcela Goglio. “It is exciting to see that as a group, Latin American films express more of a sense of identity beyond national borders, and more of a sense of interconnectedness than in the past, reflecting what is occurring in political/social/economic arenas. I hope this year's lineup provides an opportunity to witness some of this change in the region as it unfolds.” 

Four films from Mexico have been selected for Latinbeat: Emiliano Altuna, Carlos Rossini, and Diego Enrique Osorno's debut feature film, The Mayor / El Alcalde (pictured above left) capturing the fascinating contradictions in Mayor Mauricio Fernández Garza's personality as it reflects the complex situation of Mexico's drug wars—a mix of violence, modern Mexican politics, strong economic interests, and a bold discredit of the political class.

The Mexican-Guatemalan co-production film Magical Words (Breaking a Spell) / Palabras mágicas (Para romper un encantamiento) uses Lake Managua as a metaphor to paint a picture of what director Mercedes Moncada believes her beloved Nicaragua has gone through, and has become, since this pivotal and promising moment in moment in the country's history. Enrique Rivero's Never Die /Mai Morire follows Chayo, a woman who must return to her hometown of Xochimilco after she learns that the death of her mother is near.

Pablo Delgados Sánchez's impressive debut feature Las lágrimas / The Tears is about a camping trip in the woods that becomes a painful but ultimately healing rite of passage for two brothers who are struggling to cope with their disturbing family environment. 

The US premiere of the Uruguayan-Colombian animation film AninA (pictured right) by Alfredo Soderguit, narrates the story of the palindromically named Anina Yatay Salas that lives in Montevideo and attends elementary school where her classmates make fun of her because of her name. A withdrawn and foul tempered father has been waiting for the return of his son, who disappeared during the 70s dictatorship Michale Wahrmann's Brazilian film Avanti Popolo.

Latinbeat will also present the New York premiere of the Chilean film The Future / Il futuro (pictured above left), the third feature film by Alicia Scherson (Play, Turistas), which is the first of Roberto Bolaño's literary works to be adapted for cinema. The film tells the story of Bianca and her brother Tomas, two suddenly orphaned Chilean teenagers who, in the dark midst of their mourning slowly descend into an underworld of B-movies, cheap novels and derelict characters in the margins of their adopted city, Rome.

What can be worse than being 14 and going on vacation with your father? Taking your children on vacation and not being able to go out because of the rain. That's the central premise in the Uruguayan film Tanta agua / So Much Water, the directing debut by Ana Guevara & Leticia Jorge, which will also have its New York premiere.

Chilean director Ernesto Díaz Espinoza's The Machine Gun Woman / Traiganme la cabeza de la mujer metralleta (pictured left) is an action film about a naive and nerdy DJ who lives with his mother in Santiago and spends his days on his Playstation and gets into trouble with a dangerous Argentine gangster. Belated / Deshora, directed by Barbara Sarasola-Day, captures and evaluates Helena and Ernesto's already rocky marriage when a quiet and mysterious cousin arrives from Colombia to complete his rehab in the couple's Argentinean isolated wilderness home. Argentinean director Gustavo Fernandez Trivino's From Tuesday to Tuesday / De Martes a Martes narrates the story of a bodybuilder, Juan Benitez and the conflict he faces between following his dreams of opening his own gym and supporting his family.

As it was previously announced, this year's edition of Latinbeat will also features a retrospective of acclaimed Argentine filmmaker Matias Piñeiro, presenting The Stolen Man / El Hombre Robado, a film that follows a capricious young woman as she carefully interweaves friends and lovers into an intricate web of secretive yet often unexpectedly compassionate games.

In They All Lie / Todos Mienten, Piñeiro unleashes eight strong-willed characters into a clandestine plot involving art forgery, an unfinished novel, and Sarmiento's U.S. journals, resulting in a giddy kaleidoscope of different meaning that playfully channels the high postmodernism of William Gaddis. Piñeiro's most recent film Viola (pictured right) will have a one-week release playing with Rosalinda

The Latinbeat festival will run from July 12 - 21, 2013, with the attendance of some of the featured filmmakers. Scheduled appearances include: Barbara Sarasola-Day (Belated), Lina Rodriguez (Señoritas), Mercedes Moncada (Magical Words), Emiliano Altuna and Carlos Federico Rossini (The Mayor), Leticia Jorge (So Much Water), Santiago Loza (La Paz), Ernesto Diaz Espinoza (Bring Me The Head of the Machine Gun Woman), Michael Wahrman (Avanti Poppolo), and Matías Piñeiro (Viola).

 





Three Films by Sebastián Silva Will Be Released This Summer

 

Chilean director Sebastián Silva (winner of the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance for The Maid) will be busy this summer as his three most recent film productions will be released in the United States.

First at the bat is Silva's Crystal Fairy (pictured), a bizarre, mescaline-driven deadpan road trip comedy through Chile. The film stars Michael Cera as Jamie, a boorish, insensitive American traveling in the South American country, and Gaby Hoffman, in the title role as an eccentric, radical, free spirit who believes the journey is more important than the end result, and while she embraces everyone, she gets close to no one.

Winner of the World Cinema Dramatic Directing Award at Sundance, Crystal Fairy, produced by Juan de Dios Larraín and Pablo Larraín (No), opens in theaters and on demand on July 12, released by IFC Films.

Also starring Cera, Silva's Magic Magic (pictured right) is a psychological thriller about Alicia (played by Juno Temple), an American visiting her cousin Sarah in the Chilean countryside. When Sarah suddenly has to depart, Alicia is left with her cousin's friends, consequently spiraling into insomnia and paranoia. The film also stars Emily Browning, Catalina Sandino Moreno, and Agustín Silva.

Magic Magic, which premiered at Sundance and was and official selection at Cannes' Directors' Fortnight, is going straight to DVD on August 6 released by Sony Pictures. 

 

And lastly, The Museum of Modern Art in New York City will give a one week run to Silva's and Pedro Peirano's Old Cats / Gatos viejos (pictured left) August 20-26.


The film tells the story of 
Isadora (Bélgica Castro), an octogenarian living comfortably with her husband and two cats, suddenly finds herself fighting a battle on two fronts when the onset of dementia arrives at the same time that her daughter's attempt to scheme the landlord seems to require that Isadora sign over the lease on her Santiago apartment.

Unfolding with black humor and empathy in equal measure, the film emphasizes both the confusion in Isadora's psyche and the claustrophobia of her domestic landscape. A hit at the Cannes and New York film festivals in 2010, this is the film's long-awaited theatrical run in the U.S. 


 

 





Mexican Short RATITAS Wins Brooklyn Film Festival

 

The Mexican short film Ratitas / Scoundrels (pictured) by David Figueroa García was the winner of the Best Narrative Short Award at the Brooklyn Film Festival (BFF). Starring Kristyan Ferrer, Jorge Adrían Espíndola and Gustavo Sánchez Parra, Figueroa García's film tells the story of Paco and Memo, two brothers living in Acapulco that break into an empty house with a group of friends. Instead of finding a night of fun and debauchery they were looking for, they stumble upon a home owned by enforcers of a crime organization and their bond is quickly put to test. 

According to the director, the project came to be because of a news report on a French news agency about a YouTube video, in which a group of teenagers were made to confess petty crimes and then they were physically and psychologically abused on camera for them. "We found the story was a way to explore dynamics of power between friends, family and ultimately in a society plagued by violent behavior where only the strong one survives", says Figueroa García.

Figueroa García is a writer-director born in Mexico City. He graduated from Computer Science at the Instituto Politécnico Nacional, and later from the City University of New York in Classic Literature and Film production. He is currently in his final year at Columbia University's Film M.F.A program in directing. His work has received awards from the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, Directors Guild of America, the National Board of Review, IFP, HSF McNamara Grant for the arts among others, and screened in festivals around the world. 

Produced by Juan Aura and Gerry Kim, and written by Figueroa García and Mauricio Leiva-Cock, Ratitas had its U.S. Premiere at the Brooklyn Film Festival, which took place May 31-June 9 in New York City.

 

Watch the trailer:

 

 

 





Cantinflas Biopic to Start Production [Updated]

 

[June 17, 2013, Update] More details were revealed about the film's cast, which will also feature Luis Gerardo Méndez as comedian Shilinsky, Ilse Salas as Cantinflas' ex-wife Valentina Ivanova, Roberto Sosa as musician Agustín Lara, Joaquín Cosío as filmmaker/actor Emilio El Indio Fernández, Julio Bracho as actor/singer Jorge Negrete, Bárbara Mori as American actress Liz Taylor, Ana Layevska as actress Miroslava, Adal Ramones as comedian Fernando Soto Mantequilla, and Ximena González Rubio as Mexican diva María Félix. According to the production team, the cost of the film will be over $3 million USD.

After many attempts, production delays, and different names tied to the project, several news agencies have confirmed the start of the shooting of the biopic of the late Mexican legendary comedian Mario Moreno 'Cantinflas' (pictured).

The Mexican-Spanish co-production film under the title Cantinflas will be directed by Mexican director Sebastián del Amo, and as it had previously been announced, will star Spanish actor Óscar Jaenada in the leading role.

Among the names that had been linked to the project were Mexican actor Diego Luna and director Alejandro Monteverde (Bella). Del Amo's debut feature film El fantástico mundo de Juan Orol / The Fantastic World of Juan Orol was also a biopic, it tells the story of the half-forgotten B-movie master.

Born in 1975, actor Jaenada (pictured right) has starred in many Spanish films, and is best known for his role in Sylvain White's The Losers. He appears in Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides as The Spaniard. He won the Goya Award for Best Actor for his performance as flamenco legend Camarón in the film of the same name.

The Cantinflas biopic will star production in Mexico City on June 24. Born in 1911, Mario Moreno 'Cantinflas' became Mexico's greatest comedian whose popularity expanded well beyond Mexican borders.






Paula Markovitch's EL PREMIO Tops Mexico's Ariel Awards

El premio / The Prize by Argentinean-born director Paula Markovitch lived up to its name as it was the big winner at the 55th edition of the Ariel Awards, Mexico's national film prize, which were given tonight at a ceremony in Mexico City. Markovitch's debut feature film received four prizes out of ten nominations: Best Film, Best First Film, Best Original Screenplay and Best Edition.

Uruguayan-born director Rodrigo Plá was the winner of the prize for Best Director for his film La demora / The Delay. The award for Best Documentary was presented to Cuates de Australia / Drought by Everardo González, which also received the prize for Best Sound.

In the acting categories, the prize for Best Actress was awarded to Úrsula Pruneda for her leading role in Hari Sama's El sueño de Lú / Lu's Dream, while Roberto Sosa was named Best Actor for his interpretation as B-movie director Juan Orol in El fantástico mundo de Juan Orol / The Fantastic World of Juan Orol by Sebastián del Amo.

Daniel Giménez Cacho (pictured right) won the prize for Best Supporting Actor for Carlos Bolado's Colosio, el asesinato / Colosio, the Assassination and Angelina Pelaez for Best Supporting Actress for Luis Mandoki's La vida precoz y breve de Sabina Rivas / The Precocious & Brief Life of Sabina Rivas. Mandoki's film, which lead with 11 nominations, only managed to win three awards.

The Mexican Academy of Film Arts and Sciences gave three Golden Ariels to filmmaker Rafael Corkidi and actors Mario Almada and Columba Domínguez