Joel Novoa's GOD'S SLAVE Awarded at Santa Barbara

 

God's Slave / Esclavo de dios (pictured), the directorial debut by Venezuelan filmmaker Joel Novoa was the winner of the the Nueva Vision Award for Best Spanish/Latin American Film at the 29th edition of the Santa Barbara Film Festival. Director Novoa and producer José Novoa were on hand to accept the award.

Inspired by true events, the Argentinean-Uruguay-Venezuelan co-production, is an emotional and controversial political thriller following the lives of two extremists, one Islamic and the other Jewish, who cross paths while on opposing sides of the 1994 Buenos Aires AMIA bombings. The film stars Cesar Troncoso (The Pope’s Toilet), Vando Villamil, and Laureano Olivares.

The 29th edition of the Santa Barbara Film Festival took place January 30 - February 9 in California.





Remembering Eduardo Coutinho (1933-2014)

The shocking news of the death of Eduardo Coutinho recalls to mind the influential and groundbreaking filmography of the Brazilian documentarian, even as details of his murder by his son become better understood. Through a career spanning over forty years, Coutinho not only became one of the foremost documentary filmmakers in Brazil, but in all of Latin America.

Born Eduardo de Oliveira Coutinho on May 11, 1933, he studied Law, but he never graduated. He worked as a copy editor at the Visão magazine in the mid-fifties while also worked in theater directing some plays. With winnings from a contest, he moved to France to study filmmaking at the Institute for Advanced Cinematographic Studies (IDHEC) in Paris.

He returned to Brazil in 1960 and established contact with the Cinema Novo members and joined the Popular Center of Culture of the National Students Union where he worked in the production of some film productions including the omnibus film Cinco Veces Favela / Favela Five Times. In 1966 he created the production company Saga Filmes with Leon Hirzman and Marcos Farias and a year later, he directed the episode "O Pacto" for the feature film ABC do Amor / ABC of Love, and directed the feature films The Man Who Bought the World / O Homem que Comprou o Mundo (1968) and Faustão (1970).

For the following years Coutinho developed a successful career as a screenwriter working in numerous films including A Falecida (1965) and Garota de Ipanema (1967), both by Leon Hirszman, Os Condenados by Zelito Viana (1973), Lição de Amor by Eduardo Escorel (1975) and Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands / Dona Flor e Seus Dois maridos by Bruno Barreto (1976).

Between 1975 and 1984 he worked in television news magazine Globo Repórter in the TV Globo network, where he developed a passion for documentary filmmaking working on 16mm. In spite of censorship the editorial team was able to explore and report on numerous topics.

In the early eighties, he found old footage of the time he went to Pernambuco in northeast Brazil to shoot a feature film based on the 1962 assassination of João Pedro Teixeira, militan leader of the Peasant Leagues. Entitled Cabra Marcardo para Morrer, the film's cast included, amongst other non-professional locals, Teixeira's widow Elizabeth, playing herself. Brazil's military coup of 1964 interrupted the production, Mrs. Teixeira and family went into hiding, and Coutinho's footage was seized, except for one reel. Twenty years later, in 1984, Coutinho returned to the region with his salvaged footage to track down Mrs. Teixeira and family, show them the old material, and document their reactions to it and the changing times.

Coutinho's Twenty Years Later—A Man Labeled to Die / Cabra Marcardo para Morrer (pictured above right) was an unusual and unlikely hybrid documentary which garnered top honors around the world and became an instant classic. The film was awarded the top prize at the very first Rio de Janeiro Film Festival in 1984, it was shown in New York in the New Directors/New Films festival that same year, and was awarded the FIPRESCI prize at the 1985 Berlinale.

Based on the success of Twenty Years Later, Coutinho developed a prominent documentary career comprised of nine feature films and six short films. He influenced many local and international filmmakers for his formally distinguished and innovative style. His works highlight the storytelling abilities of ordinary people in films of rare beauty and impact and throughout the years they mapped a country and a society in political transition. 

Some of his most renowned titles include Santo Forte (1999) in which ten intensely religious people tell the story of their lives and their spiritual trajectories; Edifício Master / Master, a Building in Copacabana (2002, pictured above left), which shows the everyday life of the residents of an enormous apartment building located in Copacabana, a block away from the beach; Peões / Metalworkers (2004) featuring interviews with metallurgic workers who participated in the 1979–80 strikes and were led by Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who years later went to become president of Brazil; and Songs / As Cançoes (2011, pictured right) in which 18 ordinary people sing a song that marked their lives forever and talk about the story behind it.

One of his favorite themes was exploring the border between fact and fiction which was the subject of some of his films including Playing / Jogo da cena (2006) in which he intertwines interviews of women narrating their own life, with actresses performing those same stories; and Moscow / Moscou (2009, pictured left) in which he shoots scenes during rehearsals by the Galpão Theater Company for Chekov’s "The Three Sisters," and he tries to capture the very moment in which reality becomes fiction and vice-versa.

In 2009, The Museum of Modern Art in New York City presented a eight-film retrospective of Coutinho with the presence of the filmmaker. As part of the retrospective, Cinema Tropical organized a special edition is TropiChat series featuring a conversation between Coutinho and Brazilian director Bruno Barreto, at the Americas Society.

Coutinho had become one of Latin American leading documentary filmmakers, continuing the long tradition of documentary cinema in the region. In 2009's Cinema Tropical survey of the best Latin American films of the aughts, Coutinho was the most named filmmaker in the list with four titles. Reportedly, he was working on a new film project about the recent protests in Brazil.  





Brazilian Documentarian Coutinho Is Killed Allegedly by Son

Brazilian filmmaker Eduardo Coutinho, one of Latin America's leading documentarians, was stabbed to death allegedly by his son today in his home in Rio de Janeiro, reported by news site R7. The son Daniel Coutinho, who reportedly suffers from schizophrenia, is also responsible for stabbing his mother who was taken to a local hospital with serious injuries. 

Born May 11, 1933, Coutinho was one of Brazil's greatest documentary filmmakers who was highly regarded for his formally distinguished and innovative style. His influential works highlight the storytelling abilities of ordinary people in films of rare beauty and impact. Coutinho's favorite theme throughout his filmography has been the investigation of the fine line between fiction and reality.

He received numerous awards for his documentaries, which include Twenty Years Later - Man Labeled to Die, (1964/1984), filmed over a period of two decades, Master, a Building in Copacabana (2002), Babilônia 2000 (2000), Metalworkers (2004), The End and the Beginning (2005) and Playing (2006). His screenwriting credits include Doña Flor and Her Two Husbands (1976).

In 2009, The Museum of Modern Art presented a retrospective of eight seminal works by Coutinho as part of the Premiere Brazil! series, including the world premiere of his film Moscou and a special TropiChat session with him and director Bruno Barreto. Last year, Coutinho was invited as an  Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences member.





PRESUMED GUILTY Directors Get Exonerated

 

Layda Negrete and Roberto Hernández, the lawyers that co-directed Mexican documentary Presunto culpable / Presumed Guilty (pictured), were exonerated from 19 civil lawsuits that sought damages totaling the equivalent of $225 million USD.

Presumed Guilty, the 2008 film which became the highest grossing documentary feature in Mexican history, follows the case of Antonio Zúñiga, a man who got wrongly convicted for a murder that he didn't commit. With unprecedented access to the court rooms, lawyers Negrete and Hernández expose a justice system they see as corrupt and fatally compromised by a medieval concept of guilt and innocence.

The suits were filed by relatives of murder victim Juan Carlos Reyes, who was murdered in 2005. The family members, including Victor Reyes Bravo, a cousin of the victim whose testimony led to the conviction of Zúñiga, argued that they had suffered moral damage by the filmmakers. Reyes Bravo also claimed that he never gave the directors permission to include him in the film.

Judge Norma Alejandra Muñoz ruled in favor of Negrete and Hernández as it was announced last Friday. Zúñiga who had served two years in prision was released in 2008 after the filmmakers secured him a retrail and documented all the process in their documentary.

Presumed Guilty was released in Mexican theaters in 2011 and was banned temporarily few weeks later, a controversy which contributed to its popularity and success. Mexican television network Televisa broadcasted the documentary and the film was eventually released on dvd, in 2012 however, a federal judge ordered the complete shelving of all of the DVDs for sale of the film in Mexico after the lawsuits filled by the Reyes family against the filmmakers. After Friday's ruling, the film is now again authorized to be commercialized in the country.

 





Lubezki Wins Top ASC Award

Mexican cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki (pictured) won the top prize at the 28th annual edition of the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) Awards for his work on the film Gravity directed by fellow countryman Alfonso Cuarón.

This is the first time a 3D production wins the top ASC prize in the feature film category, and the third time Lubezki receives this prize, he had received it in 2006 for Cuarón's Chidren of Men and in 2011 for Terence Malick's The Tree of Life. He had also received a nomination in 2000 for Tim Burton's Sleepy Hollow.

Lubezki is also nominated to this year's Academy Awards, it is his sixth nomination, but no win yet. The winners of the 28th ASC Awards were announced last night at the Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland in California.





TropicalFRONT on Intelatin Cloudcast: January 2014 Show

 

In the first edition of TropicalFRONT on Intelatin Cloudcast of 2014, Sergio Muñoz and Carlos A. Gutiérrez discuss three Latin American films in different stages of theatrical release in the United States: Papirosen from Argentina, 7 Boxes from Paraguay and Gloria from Chile. In addition, Muñoz and Gutiérrez discuss Alfonso Cuarón and his groundbreaking new feature Gravity, the recently wrapped 2014 edition of the Sundance Film Festival and the upcoming Cinema Tropical Awards.

Filmmakers Gaston Solnicki of Papirosen and Arvin Chen of Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow? will be interviewed, along with music by Lulacruza, Nicolas Jaar and Darkside. Thank you for listening to our show. Our next show on film will be in February.

Listen to the show on iTunes.