New Theatrical Releases

 

 

Spring / Summer 2015 Season

 

 

TWO SHOTS FIRED / DOS DISPAROS
(Martín Rejtman, Argentina/Chile/Germany/Netherlands, 2014, 93 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
A Cinema Tropical release

One Week Exclusive Engagement! May 13-19
Film Society of Lincoln Center

144 West 65th Street, New York City
www.filmlinc.com / (212) 875-5232

Rejtman’s first feature in a decade is an engrossing, digressive comedy with the weight of an existentialist novel. Sixteen-year-old Mariano (Rafael Federman), inexplicably and without warning, shoots himself twice—once in the stomach and once in the head—and improbably survives. As his family strains to protect Mariano from himself, his elder brother (Benjamín Coehlo) pursues a romance with a disaffected girl (Laura Paredes) who works the counter at a fast-food restaurant, his mother (Susana Pampín) impulsively takes off on a trip with a stranger, and Mariano recruits a young woman (Manuela Martelli) to join his medieval wind ensemble.

Rejtman tells this story with both compassion and formal daring, pursuing one thread only to abandon it for another. Two Shots Fired is a wry, moving, consistently surprising film about the irrationality of emotions and how they govern our actions at each stage of our lives.

“A rare and wonderful gem of world cinema"
– A.O. Scott, The New York Times

 


 

Summer / Fall 2014 Season

 

 

BAD HAIR / PELO MALO
(Mariana Rondón, Venezuela/Peru/Germany, 2013, 93 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
A Cinema Tropical/FiGa Films release.

Two Weeks Only! November 19-December 2
Film Forum

209 West Houston Street (west of Sixth Avenue), New York City
www.filmforum.org / (212) 727-8110
Daily screenings at 12:45pm, 3pm, 5:10pm, 7:20pm, and 9:30pm

"A touching and humorous coming-of-gender story, Bad Hair chronicles the life of nine-year-old Junior, living in a bustling Caracas tenement with his widowed mother. Junior fears he has pelo malo – bad hair. For his school photo, he wants to iron his stubbornly curly mane straight to resemble one of his pop star idols. His mother, unemployed and frazzled from the pressures of raising two children in an unforgiving city, has serious misgivings; she suspects her son is gay. Grandma is more accepting, teaching Junior to dance to one of her favorite ‘60s rock ‘n’ roll tunes.

Writer-director Mariana Rondón grounds her film in the cultural realities of working-class Venezuela – and, by dint of two remarkable performances, finds warmth and humor between mother and son, even as the uncertainties of pre-adolescence threaten to pull them apart. Winner, Best Film, San Sebastian Film Festival, and winner of directing, acting, and screenwriting awards at numerous festivals throughout the world." - Mike Maggiore, Programmer, Film Forum

“Tender insight into a complicated mother-son relationship… (a) deft balance of toughness and sensitivity.”
– David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter

"Tragic and funny in equal measure (...) Highly recommended!"
- David Byrne

 

 


 

SOMOS MARI PEPA / WE ARE MARI PEPA
(Samuel Kishi Leopo, Mexico, 2013, 95 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
A Cinema Tropical/FiGa release.

August 15-21, Exclusive Engagement
Anthology Film Archives

32 Second Avenue (at Second Street), New York City
www.anthologyfilmarchives.com / (212) 505-5181
Nightly screenings at 7pm and 9pm; additional screenings at 5pm on 8/16 & 8/17

Samuel Kishi Leopo’s first feature, expanded from his earlier short film, is a finely observed, heartfelt chronicle of the lives and loves of a group of school-age punk rockers in Guadalajara as they approach the transition into adulthood. Beautifully unhurried and uneventful, We Are Mari Pepa focuses on its protagonists’ milieu and on the rhythm of their daily lives rather than on contrived plot mechanics, observing as they make music (their sole song features the refrain, “Natasha, I wanna cum in your face!”), barely tolerate their uncomprehending families, kill time, and look for love. Having just completed their school year, the boys find themselves facing the daunting realities of growing up, in a world where they have few options and where they’re destined to grow apart from each other.

We Are Mari Pepa is distinguished above all by the terrific performances from its four teenage leads, whose astonishingly natural rapport with each other seems too genuine to be faked – indeed, that they happen to be real-life childhood friends lends the film a strong dose of documentary authenticity. Showing a sure hand in his direction of these non-professional actors, as well as a keen compositional eye and an indelible sense of place, Leopo has created a film that is both funny and bittersweet.

"A sweaty, urgent, beautifully honest bliss-out." - Alan Scherstuhl, Village Voice

"Samuel Kishi Leopo makes an appealing feature debut with this tender, pitch-perfect coming-of-ager." – Variety


 

I AM HAPPINESS ON EARTH / YO SOY LA FELICIDAD DE ESTE MUNDO
(Julián Hernández, Mexico, 2014, 124 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
A Breaking Glass Pictures release.

Opens Friday, August 15

Quad Cinema
34 West 13th Street, New York City
www.quadcinema.com / (212) 255-2243

Laemmle's Playhouse 7
673 E Colorado Blvd, Pasadena, CA
www.laemmle.com / (310) 478-3836

In I Am Happiness on Earth, Emiliano looks at his life with the eyes of a film director, mixing the objective reality with the processes of artistic creation. The story he is filming flounders with his daily life, until his world is trapped in the lens of his camera. Confused, always alone and in front of a screen, now a transfigured reality, but at the same time a measurable, controllable and manipulable one. He listens to a song on a loop: one of those songs you sing or repeat as a prayer and forcing you to remember, believe and convince yourself.

The film is directed by Mexico’s premier queer filmmaker Julián Hernández –the only filmmaker to have won the Berlinale’s Teddy Award for Best Feature Film twice, for A Thousand Clouds of Peace (2003) and Raging Sun, Raging Sky (2009). Starring Hugo Catalán, Alan Ramírez, Andrea Portal, and Gabino Rodríguez I Am Happiness on Earth recently had its world premiere at the Frameline Film Festival in San Francisco, and played at Outfest in Los Angeles and at the Film Society of Lincoln Center as part of NewFest’s lineup.

"I am Happiness on Earth boasts magnificent cinematography and highly sensual scenes.
(Hernández’s) films get under the viewer’s skin.” – Gary M. Kramer, bent/indieWIRE Network



THE NAKED ROOM / EL CUARTO DESNUDO
(Nuria Ibáñez, Mexico, 2013, 67 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
A Magic Lantern release, with the collaboration of Cinema Tropical

August 29-September 4, Exclusive Engagement
Anthology Film Archives

32 Second Avenue (at Second Street), New York City
www.anthologyfilmarchives.com / (212) 505-5181
Nightly screenings at 7pm and 8:45pm; additional screenings at 5:15pm on 8/29 & 8/30

Among the most immensely powerful, exquisitely sensitive, and formally inspired documentary films in recent memory, The Naked Room takes place entirely within the confines of a pediatric therapist’s office in a Mexico City hospital, observing the initial consultations of a succession of deeply troubled kids, and brilliantly transforming this constricted space into a microcosm vast in its metaphorical dimensions. Not content to limit the physical scope of the film to the four walls of the therapist’s office, director Nuria Ibáñez focuses entirely on the faces of the children themselves, as they struggle to express their feelings of severe depression and trauma, and describe the situations that have brought them to this pass. Constructing the film almost entirely out of close-ups on the children, and relegating everything else – the doctor, the parents and guardians of the kids, the décor of the consulting room – off-screen, Ibáñez has created a film that is visually minimalist but that contains multitudes.

The close-ups force us to share the kids’ perspective, and above all to truly see them with a clarity that movies rarely achieve when depicting children. Rather than representing the sentimental notion of the “innocence” of childhood, they come alive as individualized, troubled, yet ultimately vital human beings, fighting to survive emotionally and psychologically in the face of the abuse and dysfunction the world has bequeathed to them. Through the children’s expressions and gestures, The Naked Room paints a vivid picture of a society that inflicts its resentments and frustrations, its insecurities and sense of powerlessness, on those who are entirely unequipped to defend themselves, who have just begun the delicate process of understanding their world and forming their own identities. Shattering yet somehow resisting despair, thanks to the children’s reed-like resilience and astonishing honesty, The Naked Room is a landmark of contemporary documentary filmmaking.

"A haunting exploration of mental illness in children." —Variety






NY Film Fest Will Feature the 30th Anniversary Screening of LOS SURES

The Film Society of Lincoln Center announced yesterday that the New York Film Festival will feature a special 30th anniversary screening of Diego Echeverría's Los Sures (pictured) as part of NYFF Convergence. Echeverria’s nearly lost 1984 documentary skillfully represents the challenges of its time: drugs, gang violence, crime, abandoned real estate, racial tension, single-parent homes, and inadequate local resources in Brooklyn’s Los Sures neighborhood.

Yet Echeverria’s portrait also celebrates the vitality of this largely Puerto Rican and Dominican community, showing the strength of their culture, their creativity, and their determination to overcome a desperate situation. Nearly lost, this 16mm film has been restored, reframed, and remixed by Southside based UnionDocs just in time for the 30th anniversary of its premiere at the New York Film Festival.

 The film by the Chilean-born director will be accompanied by the interactive presentation Living Los Sures. Using Escheverria’s film as a starting point, Southside-based UnionDocs has created a massive mixed-media project that defies easy categorization. Composed over the course of four years and pulling on the talents of over 30 different artists, Living Los Sures paints a picture of a neighborhood from street level, an ever-evolving mosaic of people and places captured through film, audio, and now an online participatory experience.  With the premiere of two new elements—Eighty-Nine Steps, a continuation of the story of one of the original characters from Los Sures, and Shot by Shot—that invite people to share their personal stories inspired by the shots and locations of the original film, the UnionDocs team will take audiences through the process of building this unique documentary storyworld.

NYFF Convergence  is an ongoing initiative of the New York Film Festival focused on the intersection of technology and storytelling. It  offers audiences and creators the unique opportunity to experience a curated selection of some of the most exciting immersive storytelling projects being produced today. Convergence is about creators and makers and the fact that in our digital world every member of the audience is not just an observer but an active participant in building their entertainment. The 52nd edition of the New York Film Festival will take place September 16 - October 12.
 





Tropical Uncanny

 

Tropical Uncanny:
Latin American Tropes & Mythologies

August 8 – September 26, 2014
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

A film companion to the exhibit "Under the Same Sun" curated by Pablo León de la Barra, “Tropical Uncanny” is a playful and irreverent revision of some of Latin America's political, social, cultural, and cinematic tropes. Toying with concepts such as the New World, revolution, domestic workers, the favela, and pre-Columbian paradise, this film series challenges and subverts notions of subjectivity and the construction of the otherness south of the border. Mixing fiction, documentary, and experimental work from recent, repertoire, and archival material, as well as suggesting dialogues between filmmakers and visual artists, this program rethinks the representation of Latin America both at home and abroad.

Programmed by Carlos A. Gutiérrez, in collaboration with Jerónimo Rodríguez.

Special Special thanks to Amalia Córdova, Chris Gude, Raúl Guzmán, Pablo León de la Barra, Corey Sabourin, Maria-Christina Villaseñor and Christina Yang.

Thanks to Dora Amorim, CinemaScopio; Agustina Chiarino, Control Z Films; Amanda Guimarães and Rachel Daisy Ellis, Desvia; Marilys Downey; Alex García and Sandro Fiorin, FiGa Films; Natalia Trebik, Le Fresnoy; and Jessy Vega, Interior XIII.

Full Schedule

Friday, August 8, 1pm
‘Remapping the New World’
Journey to a Land Otherwise Known / Voyage En La Terre Autrement Dite
(Laura Huertas Millán, Colombia/France, 2011, 22 min. In French with English subtitles. New York Premiere)
Nefandus (Carlos Motta, U.S./Colombia, 2013, 13 min. In Spanish and Kogi with English subtitles. New York Premiere)
Ex Isto / Ex It (Cao Guimarães, Brazil, 2010, 86 min. In Portuguese, with English subtitles)
Three visual artists reconsider the ‘New World,’ providing provocative alternative cartographies. Laura Huertas Millán’s Journey to a Land Otherwise Know—shot at a tropical greenhouse in Lille, France—uses textual accounts by European colonizers to create a fake ethnography of the New World critical of the ever-prevailing exoticism. In Carlos Motta’s visual essay Nefandus, an indigenous man and a Spanish-speaking man tell stories about acts of sodomy that took place in the Americas during the conquest, while Carlos Guimarães Ex Isto presents a historical provocation imaging French philosopher René Descartes on a tropical journey in Brazil. Followed by a discussion with director Carlos Motta.

Friday, August 15, 1pm
‘Under the Same Stars’
Agarrando pueblo / The Vampires of Poverty
(Luis Ospina and Carlos Mayolo, Colombia, 1978, 27 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
Estrellas / Stars (Federico León and Marcos Martínez, Argentina, 2007, 64 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
‘Under the Same Stars’ offers a humorous meditation on the portrayal of poverty in Latin America, and the ways the poor are manipulated by the local and transnational media. Luis Ospina and Carlos Mayolo’s 1978 classic Agarrando Pueblo is a scathing satire of what they characterized as “poverty-porn,” while Federico León and Marcos Martínez’s documentary feature Stars follows a group of residents from a shantytown in the outskirts of Buenos Aires who find professional careers playing poor people in film and television productions.

Friday, August 22, 1pm
‘Gone Native’
Día dos / Day Two
(Dante Cerano, Mexico, 2004, 23 min. In P'urhepecha and Spanish, English subtitles)
The Laughing Alligator (Juan Downey, U.S./Venezuela 1979, 27 min. In English)
Sip’Ohi, l lugar del manduré / Sip’Ohi, Manduré’s Place (Sebastián Lingardi, Argentina, 2011, 63 min. In Wichí with English subtitles)
Three works made by very dissimilar artists present an ideal opportunity to showcase the limits and pitfalls of ethnographic cinema. In Day Two, director Dante Cerano provides an ironic portrait of the second day of a P'urhepecha wedding ceremony. Juan Downey challenges the anthropological gaze of the Yanomami in his irreverent The Laughing Aligator, while in Sebastián Lingardi’s Sip’Ohi, Manduré’s Place, an indigenous man returns to his hometown with the aim of listening and collecting stories of ichí culture, transmitted orally from generation to generation. Followed by a discussion with special guest Amalia Córdova.

Friday, August 29, 1pm
‘Cold Front’
Recife Frio / Cold Tropics
(Kleber Mendonça Filho, Brazil, 2009, 24 min. In Spanish, Portuguese, and French with English subtitles)
Los guantes mágicos / The Magic Gloves (Martín Rejtman, Argentina/France, 2003, 90 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
A fictitious drastic temperature drop in Recife and Buenos Aires offer an excellent starting point for two cherished South American filmmakers to create poignant and multilayered critiques about globalization and late capitalism. Brazilian director Kleber Mendonça Filho (Neighboring Sounds) creates a satirical mockumentary chronicling an odd weather phenomenon and its local effects in Cold Tropics. In the absurdist comedy The Magic Gloves, Argentinean director Martín Rejtman delivers his distinctive deadpan humor in a story about two dysfunctional middle-class couples struggling to make ends meet.

Friday, September 5, 1pm
‘Musical Mayhem’
Touching from a Distance
(Angel Nevarez and Valerie Tevere, U.S., 2008. 6 min. No dialogue)
Marimbas del infierno / Marimbas from Hell (Julio Hernández Cordón, Guatemala/Mexico, 2010, 74 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
In the hybrid comedy Marimbas from Hell, Julio Hernández Cordón tells the feverish story of the improbable artistic collaboration between two wretched musicians: Don Alfonso, a homeless marimba player, and Blacko, a pioneer of Guatemalan heavy metal music. The film is preceded by Angel Nevarez and Valerie Tevere’s Touching from a Distance, which serves as a musical appetizer toying with the idea of the fragmentation of the public space to the rhythms of mariachi music.

Friday, September 12, 1pm
‘Nueva York’
Recordando el Ayer
(Alexandra Cuesta, 2007, 9 min. No dialogue)
Pareces una carreta de esa que no la para ni lo’ bueye / You look like a carriage that not even the oxen can stop (Nelson Carlo, U.S./Dominican Republic, 2012, 85 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
‘Nueva York’ offers an off-kilter representation of the city. Ecuadorean artist Alexandra Cuesta presents an experimental portrayal of Jackson Heights in Recordando el Ayer, where memory and identity are observed through the textures of everyday life. Dominican-born Nelson Carlo, in his elegantly-crafted debut documentary feature film, follows Gladys and her daughter who share their isolated lives in an apartment in Washington Heights, creating an unsettling portrait of the two women.

Friday, September 19, 1pm
‘TV or Not to Be’
Cinépolis: La capital del cine / Cinepolis: The Movie Capital
(Ximena Cuevas, Mexico, 2003, 22 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
Ismar (Gustavo Beck, Brazil, 2007, 12 min. In Portuguese with English subtitles)
Un día / One Day (Leonardo Sagástegui, Peru, 2002, 19 min. In Spanish with English subtitles. New York Premiere)
Tómbola / Raffle (Ximena Cuevas, Mexico, 2001, 8 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
‘TV or Not to Be,’ is the question embraced by Ximena Cuevas, Gustavo Beck and Leonardo Sagástegui. With her characteristic and unflinching humor, Cuevas offers two critical takes on mass media and the society of consumption. Beck sketches a portrait of Ismar, contrasting the naivety of a kid fueled by the allure of television with a person searching for his own identity, and Sagástegui himself becomes a contestant on a popular game show, in his caustic performance-driven piece One Day. Followed by a discussion with director Gustavo Beck.

Saturday, September 20, 6pm
‘The Ordinary Unspoken’
Ebb and Flow / A Onda Traz, O Vento Leva
(Gabriel Mascaro, Brazil/Spain, 2012, 28 min. In Portuguese with English subtitles. New York Premiere)
Hiroshima (Pablo Stoll, Uruguay/Colombia/ Argentina/Spain, 2009, 79 min. No dialogue with English intertitles. New York Premiere)
In ‘The Ordinary Unspoken’ two filmmakers, one Brazilian, the other Uruguayan, push verbal language to its cinematographic limits. Gabriel Mascaro’s Ebb and Flow follows a young deaf man who installs car stereos in a small dealership, while Pablo Stoll presents an unlikely slacker silent film—with the clever use of intertitles— about a young man who sings in a rock band in the sui generis Hiroshima.

Friday, September 26, 1pm
‘Domestic Dialectic’
El palacio / The Palace
(Nicolás Pereda, Mexico/Canada, 2013, 36 min. In Spanish with English subtitles. New York Premiere)
Amelia & Morena (Andrea Franco, Peru/USA, 2010, 10 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
Reimon (Rodrigo Moreno, Argentina/Germany, 2014. 72 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
The figure of the maid embodies a plethora of Latin America’s gender, social and class contradictions. In ‘Domestic Dialetic’ three filmmakers present varied fiction and non-fiction perspectives on the realitites of servants in the contemporary world. Nicolás Pereda’s The Palace follows the everyday lives of 17 women who live together and are trained for various jobs, including as domestic workers. Amelia & Morena by Andrea Franco depicts the relationship between a young woman and her long-time maid, and Rodrigo Moreno’s Reimon is a poignant portrait of a young woman who works as a maid in a pretentiously liberal household.

 





From Guadalajara, WE ARE MARI PEPA Opens in NYC August 15

Cinema Tropical and FiGa Films have announced the New York theatrical premiere run of Samuel Kishi Leopo’s We Are Mari Pepa (pictured), August 15 - 21, at Anthology Film Archives. An official selection of the Berlin, AFI and Morelia film festivals, Kishi Leopo’s "tender, pitch-perfect coming-of-ager" (Variety) is at the forefront of a new wave of Mexican filmmakers emerging from the city of Guadalajara.

Kishi Leopo’s debut feature film, expanded from his earlier short film, is a finely observed, heartfelt chronicle of the lives and loves of a group of school-age punk rockers in Guadalajara as they approach the transition into adulthood.

Beautifully unhurried and uneventful, We Are Mari Pepa focuses on its protagonists’ milieu and on the rhythm of their daily lives rather than on contrived plot mechanics, observing as they make music, barely tolerate their uncomprehending families, kill time, and look for love. Having just completed their school year, the boys find themselves facing the daunting realities of growing up, in a world where they have few options and where they’re destined to grow apart from each other.

We Are Mari Pepa is distinguished above all by the terrific performances from its four teenage leads, whose astonishingly natural rapport with each other seems too genuine to be faked – indeed, that they happen to be real-life childhood friends lends the film a strong dose of documentary authenticity. Showing a sure hand in his direction of these non-professional actors, as well as a keen compositional eye and an indelible sense of place, Kishi Leopo has created a film that is both funny and bittersweet.

 

Watch the trailer:

 





Julián Hernández's I AM HAPPINESS ON EARTH Opens in NYC and LA on August 15

 

Breaking Glass Pictures has announced the U.S. theatrical and DVD/VOD release of the LGBT Mexican drama I Am Happiness on Earth (Yo soy la felicidad de este mundo, pictured) by acclaimed director Julián Hernández. The film opens at the Quad Cinema in New York City and at the Laemmle Playhouse in Los Angeles on Friday, August 15th, followed by its DVD/VOD release (all cable providers, iTunes, Amazon Instant) on August 19, 2014. 

In I Am Happiness on Earth, Emiliano looks at his life with the eyes of a film director, mixing the objective reality with the processes of artistic creation. The story he is filming flounders with his daily life, until his world is trapped in the lens of his camera. Confused, always alone and in front of a screen, now a transfigured reality, but at the same time a measurable, controllable and manipulable one. He listens to a song on a loop: one of those songs you sing or repeat as a prayer and forcing you to remember, believe and convince yourself.

The film is directed by Mexico’s premier queer filmmaker Julián Hernández –the only filmmaker to have won the Berlinale’s Teddy Award for Best Feature Film twice, for A Thousand Clouds of Peace (2003) and Raging Sun, Raging Sky (2009). Starring Hugo Catalán, Alan Ramírez, Andrea Portal, and Gabino Rodríguez I Am Happiness on Earth recently had its world premiere at the Frameline Film Festival in San Francisco, and played at Outfest in Los Angeles. It will be making its New York premiere at the Film Society of Lincoln Center as part of NewFest’s lineup this week.

 

Watch the trailer:






González Iñárritu's BIRDMAN Selected for Closing Night of NY Film Fest

 

The Film Society of Lincoln Center has just announced that Birdman or the Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance (pictured) by Mexican filmmaker Alejandro González Iñárritu will be the Closing Night selection for the upcoming 52nd New York Film Festival, which will take place September 26 – October 12.

The black comedy stars Michael Keaton, Zach Galifianakis, Edward Norton, Andrea Riseborough, Amy Ryan, Emma Stone and Naomi Watts. This marks González Iñárritu’s third time at the festival, having previously screened Amores Perros (2000) and 21 Grams (2003). The Fox Searchlight Pictures and New Regency release is slated to open in select theaters on October 17, 2014.
 
New York Film Festival Director and Selection Committee Chair, Kent Jones said: "Birdman is a knockout. It’s consistently surprising and inventive – you think the movie is going in one direction and then Iñárritu shifts gears and takes you somewhere else completely unexpected: the movie is like an intricate machine generating greater and greater amounts of beautiful radiant energy. The entire cast is amazing and they mesh perfectly, but I have to say that Michael Keaton is astonishing. He’s always been a terrific and, in my opinion, underrated actor. Here he gets the role he deserves, and he makes the most of it. And, it’s a great Broadway movie."