Alonso, Piñeiro and Rejtman Featured at the New York Film Fest

Three Argentinean films have been selected for the main slate of the 52nd annual edition of the New York Film Festival, the Film Society of Lincoln Center has announced. The films, making their U.S. premiere, are Jauja by Lisandro Alonso, The Princess of France / La princesa de Francia by Matías Piñeiro, and Two Shots Fired / Dos disparos by Martín Rejtman.

A work of tremendous beauty and a source of continual surprise, Alonso’s first film since 2008’s Liverpool is also his first period piece (set during the Argentinean army’s Conquest of the Desert in the 1870s), his first film with international stars (led by Viggo Mortensen), and his first screenplay with a co-writer (poet and novelist Fabián Casas). But the emphasis, as in all his work, is on bodies in landscapes. Danish military engineer Gunnar Dinesen (Mortensen, in a Technicolor-bright cavalry uniform) traverses a visually stunning variety of Patagonian shrub, rock, grass, and desert on horseback and on foot in search of his teenage daughter (Viilbjørk Agger Malling), who has eloped with a new love. Alonso’s style reaches new heights of sensory attentiveness and physicality, driving the action toward a thrilling conclusion that transcends the limits of cinematic time and space.

As in his critical hit Viola (2013),  Piñeiro doesn’t transplant Shakespeare to the present day so much as summon the spirit of his polymorphous comedies. Víctor (Julián Larquier Tellarini) returns to Buenos Aires after his father’s death and a spell in Mexico to prepare a radio production of Love’s Labour’s Lost. Reuniting with his repertory, he finds himself sorting out complicated entanglements with girlfriend Paula (Agustina Muñoz), sometime lover Ana (María Villar), and departed actress Natalia (Romina Paula), as well as his muddled relations with the constellation of friends involved with the project. As the film tracks the group’s criss-crossing movements and interactions, their lives become increasingly enmeshed with the fiction they’re reworking, potential outcomes multiply, and reality itself seems subject to transformation. An intimate, modestly scaled work that takes characters and viewers alike into dizzying realms of possibility, The Princess of France is the most ambitious film yet from one of world cinema’s brightest young talents, a cumulatively thrilling experience.

The first feature in a decade by Martín Rejtman (The Magic Gloves), a founding figure of the new Argentine cinema, 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.

As it was previously announced, Birdman, the most recent film by Mexican director Alejandro González Iñárritu has been selected as Closing Night Gala for the festival. The 52nd edition of the New York Film Festival will take place September 26-October 12. (Film descriptions provided by the New York Film Festival).

 





THE GERMAN DOCTOR Tops Argentina's Silver Condor Awards

 

Lucía Puenzo's The German Doctor / Wakolda (pictured) was the big winner at the 62th edition of the Silver Condor Awards which were announced at a ceremony in Buenos Aires yesterday. Puenzo's third feature film was awarded with seven Silver Condors including for Best Film,  Best Director, Best Leading Actress (Natalia Oreiro), Best Supporting Actor (Guillermo Pfening), Breakout Female Actress (Florencia Bado), Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Cinematography.

Puenzo's drama The German Doctor centers on a family in Argentina who are making a voyage in order to open a small resort lodge. Along the way they meet up with the title character, who appears to be a charming and helpful man. However, he hides a disturbing secret, and grows uncomfortably fixated on the family's diminutive 12-year-old daughter. 

The award for Best Documentary was given to José Luis García's The Girl from the South / La chica del sur and Mercedes Sosa, The Voice of Latin America / Mercedes Sosa, la voz de Latinoamérica by Rodrigo Vila. The Silver Condor Awards were presented last night at the Avenida Theater in Buenos Aires.

 





MoMA to Release Marcelo Gomes' ONCE UPON A TIME VERONICA

 

The Museum of Modern Art in New York City has announced the one-week theatrical run of the Brazilian film Once Upon a Time Veronica / Era uma vez eu, Verônica (pictured) by Marcelo Gomes, which will play September 8-14

A finely tuned, emotionally raw portrait of a woman's conflicted entry into adulthood, Once Upon a Time Veronica is a thoroughly modern anti–fairy tale.

Director Gomes shows a rare ability to get under the skin—and cut close to the bone—of his emotionally vulnerable but resilient main character. Anchored by a tour de force performance from the fearless Hermila Guedes, this sensual, psychologically complex character study charts the personal and professional growth of one young woman in Recife. The film also stars Maeve Jinkings and João Miguel.

The film is released in the U.S. by Big World Pictures.

 





Toronto Film Fest Announces Latin American Titles

The Toronto International Film Festival has announced the full lineup for its 2014 edition which includes several titles in their international, North American and local premiere. Playing in the Contemporary World Cinema showcase are seven Latin American films.

Argentina will be represented by Aire Libre (pictured left) by Anahí Berneri, Lulu by Luis Ortega and Two Shots Fired / Dos disparos by Martín Rejtman; Cuba will be featured with Ernesto Daranas' Behaviour / Conducta and Venice by Kiki Álvarez; Christian Jiménez's Voice Over will be representing Chile, and Sand Dollars / Dólares de arena by Laura Amelia Guzmán and Israel Cárdenas.

The Wavelenghts section of the festival will host the North American premieres of the Argentinean films Jauja by Lisandro Alonso and Matías Piñeiro's The Princess of France / La princesa de Francia (pictured right), and it will also feature the Canadian-Chilean short film Lunar Almanac by Malena Szlam and the U.S.-Mexican co-production short Night Noon by Shambhavi Kaul.

As it was previously announced, the Argentinean film Relatos salvajes / Wild Tales by Damián Szifron will also have its North American premiere at the Canadian festival in the Special Presentation section. Andrea di Stefano's Escobar: Paradise Lost about the infamous Colombian drugtrafficker performed by Benicio del Toro will also premiere at the festival galas.

The 2014 edition of the Toronto International Film Festival will take place September 4-14 in Canada.

 





TropicalFRONT on Intelatin Cloudcast: August 2014

The August 2014 edition of TropicalFRONT on Intelatin Cloudcast features a review of Latin American cinema with Carlos Gutiérrez of Cinema Topical. The featured films of the month include The Empty Hours / Las horas muertas by Aarón Fernández and We Are Mari Pepa / Somos Mari Pepa by Samuel Kishi Leopo and Cry Now by Alberto Barboza. Also listen to an interview with Miguel Ángel Caballero for Cry Now, an interview with Manuel Martín Cuenca para Canibal (en español) + music by Gustavo Santaolalla, Natalia Clavier & El Conjunto Nueva Ola + Film Movement's VOD pick of the month: XXY by Lucía Puenzo. Produced by Sergio C. Muñoz at Intelatin.

Listen to the show on PodBean or iTunes.

Enjoy!

 

 





Brazilian Film THE WAY HE LOOKS Wins NewFest

Brazilian director, Daniel Ribeirowas presented the NewFest Audience Award for his first full length feature film, The Way He Looks / Hoje eu quero voltar sozinho at the close of New York's LGBT festival at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.

The coming-of-age tale, expanded from the 2010 award winning short film, I Don’t Want to Go Back Alone, centers on blind teenager Leonardo (Ghilherme Lobo), and his best friend Giovanna (Tess Amorim) who’s secretly in love with him.

The arrival of a new student alters the dynamic as both start to fall for Gabriel (Fabio Audi). As Leo and Gabriel start to spend more time together their feelings for each other deepen. With a melodic soundtrack that includes tunes from Belle and Sebastian, One Direct and David Bowie, the film offers a positive portrayal of young gay teenagers in love.

The Way He Looks premiered earlier this year at the 64th Berlin International Film Festival where it won the Teddy Award for Best Dramatic Feature as well as the FIPRESCI Prize for Best Feature Film in the Panorama section. It also screened earlier in the summer at Outfest in Los Angeles where it won the prize for Best Dramatic Feature.

The film was acquired by Strand Releasing and is slated for a November theatrical release. The 26th edition of NewFest took place July 24- 29 in New York.