Writer-directors Fernando Frías from Mexico and Gabriela Amaral Almeida from Brazil have been selected as part of the 13 projects for the 2014 Sundance Institute's Directors and Screenwriters Labs, as it was announced today. The Labs will take place at the Sundance Resort in Utah from May 26 through June 26. The Labs are the centerpiece of the Institute’s year-round work with narrative feature filmmakers and are part of 10 residential labs the Institute will host for artists this summer, collectively representing the most promising new independent film and theater projects.
Born and raised in Mexico City, Fernando Frias currently attends Columbia University Graduate School of the Arts as a Fulbright Scholar. His first feature, Rezeta, won the Jury Award for Best Narrative Feature at the 2014 Slamdance Film Festival. His project I’m No Longer Here Following the death of his older brother, a teenage Mexican boy is forced by his mother to migrate to New York City. When he arrives, he quickly realizes that the violence plaguing his home is nothing compared to the feelings of alienation and loneliness he experiences in America.
Gabriela Amaral Almeida has directed seven short films, including The Comforting Hand and One Spring, which have screened at over 80 international film festivals. She has worked as a screenwriter for directors including Cao Hamburger, Sérgio Machado, and Marcia Faria, and is currently writing the screenplay for Walter Salles’ next feature. She's participating at the Sundance lab with the project The Father’s Shadow, about A nine-year-old girl with strange powers and an obsession with horror films attempts to bring her mother back from the dead as a means of connecting with her sick father.
Since its founding in 1981, the Sundance Institute Feature Film Program (FFP) has supported an extensive list of leading-edge independent films including Lucrecia Martel’s La Cienaga and Walter Salles’ Central Station.

The Brazilian Film Festival returns to New York City for its twelfth year with an exciting lineup of 13 films, most of them in their New York premiere, and with a special tribute to Bossa Nova composer Vinicius de Moraes, co-writer of the worldwide hit song "Garota de Ipanema" (The Girl from Ipanema), in honor of the centenary of his birth. Presented by the Inffinito Grupo, the 12th edition of the festival will take place June 1-7 at the Tribeca Cinemas and Central Park's SummerStage.
The Brazilian Film Festival will also present the New York premiere of another highly praised debut feature film, Tatoo (pictured right) by Hilton Lacerda. Hailed as “bouncy and thought-provoking” (The Hollywood Reporter), the film is set in the last years of Brazil's dictatorship, and it was the winner of the Best Film award at the Gramado Film Festival, as well as a favorite at the Palm Springs and Rio de Janeiro film festivals.
Los insólitos peces gato / The Amazing Catfish (pictured) the acclaimed debut feature by Mexican director Claudia Sainte-Luce will have a theatrical run both in New York City and Los Angeles this June by the hand of distribution company Strand Releasing.
Historia del miedo / History of Fear (pictured), the directorial debut by Argentine director Benjamin Naishtat was the winner of the top prize for Best Film in the international competition at the 15th edition of the Jeonju Film Festival, which is South Korea's biggest indie film event. The award comes with a cash prize of approximately $19,000 USD.
The Chilean film Matar a un hombre / To Kill a Man (pictured) by Alejandro Fernández Almendras was the winner of the top prize City of Lisbon for Best Film at the 11th edition of the IndieLisboa film festival. The award comes with a cash prize of 10,000 euros.
The Mexican documentary film Café (pictured) by Hatuey Viveros was the winner of the top prize for Best Film in the international competition at the 20th edition of the Visions du Réel Film Festival in Nyons, Switzerland.
Other Latin American winners at this year's edition of Visions du Réel include the Chilean documentary Propaganda by the collective MAFI which was awarded with the George Foundation Jury Prize for the most innovative medium-lenght film in the international competition, with a cash prize of approximately $5,700 USD; and the Paraguayan-Swiss co-production El tiempo nublado (pictured right) by Arami Ullón which was awarded the prize for Best First Feature in the New Perspective competition with $11,300 USD approximately and a Special Mention in the Swiss competition.