The Brazilian film The Way He Looks / Hoje eu quero voltar sozinho (pictured left), the directorial feature by Daniel Ribeiro, and the Venezuelan film Bad Hair / Pelo Malo were awarded at the 2014 edition of Outfest, the Los Angeles LGBT Film Festival, as it was announced today. Ribeiro's film was presented with the Award for Dramatic Feature, while Rondón's Bad Hair was presented with the Special Programming Award for Freedom.
Set to the bouncy beats of Belle and Sebastian, the Brazilian euphoric, sun-kissed coming-of-age fable The Way He Looks was a sensation at the 2014 Berlin Film Festival, where it swept the Teddy Award and FIPRESCI prize.
The film follows Leonardo, who spends his days allowing his best friend Giovana to drag him around town. Being blind has always been an inconvenience for Leonardo, but his angsty adolescence gets a lift when the handsome and smooth-talking Gabriel turns down numerous offers from ogling girls to hang with Leonardo after school. The longer they spend together, the more apparent their shared attraction becomes – not just to them but to a spurned Giovana as well. As social pressure mounts on both to fit within their confined social boxes, the two must decide whether to ignore their feelings or to throw caution to the wind and admit that they might actually be falling in love. The film will be released in the U.S. by the hand of Strand Releasing.
Trapped in a vicious cycle of poverty, with employment prospects looking grim, in Bad Hair (pictured right) a panicked single mother lashes out at her effeminate 9-year-old son for potentially being gay. The film tackles racial and sexual prejudices within an impoverished section of Venezuela without making villains of its characters. Filmmaker Mariana Rondón's film floored audiences and critics at the Toronto International Film Festival, earning praise for its striking camera work and harrowing portrayal of desperation and abuse. The film will be in U.S. theaters this fall by the hand of FiGa Films and Cinema Tropical.
The 2014 edition of Outfest took place July 10-20 in Los Angeles, California.

The Colombian documentary film project Nuestro Monte Luna (pictured) by Pablo Álvarez-Mesa has been awarded with funds from the Sundance Film Institute's Documentary Film Program, the organization announced last Monday as it unveiled the winners of the program's Spring 2014 grants.
The Locarno Film Festival has announced the full lineup for its 67th edition which includes the world premiere of two films from Argentina and one from Brazil in its official competition: Martín Rejtman's Dos disparos / Two Gun Shots (pictured left), Matías Piñeiro's La Princesa de Francia / The Princess of France and Gabriel Mascaro's August Winds / Ventos de Agosto.
Also from Argentina, Matías Piñeiro's will be presenting The Princess of France (pictured right), the third installment of his Shakespearean project. A year after his father’s death in Mexico, Victor returns to Buenos Aires with a twofold mission. On the one hand, he brings with him a new project for his former theater company; on the other, he abandons his part as The Princess of France and takes up a new role in front of five actresses who know him all too well, but who don´t know that time to work will soon become a time to think again about lost loves.
Other Latin American film announced to participate this year at Locarno are the Uruguayan film Los enemigos del dolor by Arauco Hernández, the Colombian film Los hongos by Oscar Ruiz Navia, and the Mexican film Navajazo by Ricardo Silva in the Concorso Cineasti del presente competition for first or second feature films. The Brazilian film Power of Affections by Helena Ignez will be screened out of competition.
Reportero (pictured) the documentary film by Bernardo Ruiz, received a News and Documentary Emmy Award nomination in the Outstanding Informational Programming—Long-Form category. The film follows a veteran reporter and his colleagues at Zeta, a Tijuana-based independent newsweekly, as they stubbornly ply their trade in one of the deadliest places in the world for members of the media. In Mexico, more than 50 journalists have been slain or have vanished since December 2006, when former President Felipe Calderón came to power and launched a government offensive against the country’s powerful drug cartels and organized crime.
The Berlinale's World Cinema Fund has announced the winning projects for its 20th round of support which includes the Colombian-Argentinean filmMonos to be directed by filmmakers Alejandro Landes (Porfirio, pictured left) and Alexis Dos Santos (Glue). The project will receive 40,000 euros destined towards its production.