CELEBRATING the New Wave of Mexican Cinema
Transcription
CELEBRATING the New Wave of Mexican Cinema
Mexico at the Smithsonian CELEBRATING the New Wave of Mexican Cinema Washington, DC Film Festival November 30 – December 2, 2007 SCHEDULE O F E V E N TS All programs are free and will include a discussion following the film with the guest speakers and preceded by a short film. Friday, November 30 J oin leading stars and emerging talents of Mexican film for a 3-day celebration honoring the new wave of Mexican cinema! Five world-class directors will present 5 films that capture the spirit and creative brilliance emerging in Mexican cinema today. In addition, five award-winning Mexican short films will also be featured during the festival. Engage and meet with some of Mexico’s premier talents in discussions and Q&As following each showing! Enrich your awareness of outstanding films and celebrate the new wave of Mexican cinema! ALL EVENTS are FREe, include discussions & OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Locations: Baird Auditorium, National Museum of Natural History • Mexican Cultural Institute • Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium, National Portrait Gallery 11am Press conference (Open to the press and public) Location: Mexican Cultural Institute 7 pm Chavez directed by Diego Luna, (2007, 80 mins) followed by a discussion with the award winning director. Also presenting, Sirenas de Fondo directed by: Arcadi Palerm (2006, 10 mins) Location: Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium, National Portrait Gallery Saturday, December 1 3 pm Cochochi directed by Laura Amelia Guzmán and Israel Cárdenas (2007, 87 mins), followed by a discussion with the award winning producer, Pablo Cruz Also presenting, The Miracle (El Milagro) directed by Ernesto Contreras (2000, 15 mins) Location: Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium, National Portrait Gallery 6:30 pm Blood (Sangre) directed by Amat Escalante (2005, 90 mins), followed by a discussion with the director. Also presenting, Milk and Water (La Leche y el Agua) directed by: Celso R. García (2006, 12 mins) Location: Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium, National Portrait Gallery Sunday, December 2 1 pm Duck Season (Temporada de Patos) directed by Fernando Eimbcke, (2004, 90 mins), followed by a discussion with the director. Also presenting, Ambulance Music (Música de Ambulancia) directed by: Paula Markovitch (2006, 13 mins) Location: Location: Baird Auditorium, National Museum of Natural History 4 pm The Violin (El Violin) directed by Francisco Vargas (2005, 98 mins) followed by a discussion with awardwinning actress, Adriana Barraza. Also presenting, A Mother’s Love (Amor de Madre) directed by Luis Urquiza (2006, 10 mins) Location: Baird Auditorium, National Museum of Natural History For more information, please visit our website at www.latino.si.edu or www.instituteofmexicodc.org or call us at (202) 728-1675. MEXICO AT THE S M I T H SO N I A N About the Guest Directors & Actors Guanajuato, Berlin, and Sao Paolo festivals. In 2002, Eimbcke debuted No Sea Malito, a short film about corruption, at Sao Paolo. In 2003, Eimbcke submitted The Look of Love to the Berlinale’s first Talent Campus and in the following year, he wrote a script for the Instituto Mexicano de Cinematografía, which led to the creation of Temporada de Patos, (Duck Season). In addition, Eimbcke has earned recognition and awards for his work with rock artists on their music videos. Adriana Barraza (actress, director) Mistress of Ceremony for the program Presenting The Violin (El Violin), Sunday, December 2nd, 4 pm, Baird Auditorium, National Museum of Natural History Nominated for an Academy Award, a Golden Globe and other prestigious honors for her role in Babel, Ms. Barraza is also widely recognized for her performance in Amores Perros. She starred alongside Gael García Bernal in both films. Born in Toluca in Central Mexico, she studied acting at the local fine arts school while working and raising her daughter. Since moving to Mexico City in 1985, Barraza has worked as a theater director and guest starred and directed many Mexican television shows including: Mujer, Casos de la Vida Real Bajo un Mismo Rostro playing Elvira; La Paloma starring as Madre Clara; and Imperio de Cristal playing Flora. In 1997, she played the role of Nurse Clara Domínguez in Alguna Vez Tendremos Alas. Barraza directed Locura de Amor (in which she also starred), Nunca Te Olvidare and El Manantial. She is a professional acting coach and has worked with actors for several movie and television shows, including the American film, Spanglish. Amat Escalante (director) Presenting Blood (Sangre), Saturday, December 1st, 6:30 pm, Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium, National Portrait Gallery Co produced by Carlos Reygadas (Japon, Battle for Heaven) and winner of the 2005 Cannes Film Festival’s Official Selection International Critics’ Prize for Sangre, Amat Escalante is a self-taught filmmaker who has earned numerous distinctions throughout his career. Hailing from Guanajuato, Mexico, Escalante devoted himself to cinema at the age of 15. After completing two short films, Escalante wrote and directed his first feature, Sangre, which is shot in his native Guanajuato. Prior to that, he worked as an assistant to Carlos Reygadas on Battle for Heaven. Today, Escalante is considered one of the new leading talents in Mexican film. Diego Luna (director, actor, producer) Presenting Chávez, Friday, November 30th, 7 pm, Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium, National Portrait Gallery Premiering at the Tribeca Film Festival, Chávez marks Luna’s directorial debut. Canana Films, the production company he formed with lifelong friend Gael García Bernal and Pablo Cruz, produced Chávez. Following Luna’s 2001 breakout success as Tenoch Iturbide in the critically acclaimed Y Tu Mamá También, he is currently making name for himself in the U.S. film industry, with starring roles alongside Bon Jovi in Vampires: Los Muertos (2002) and in the Academy Award-winning film, Frida (2002). Prior to these roles, Luna appeared in director Julian Schnabel’s critically acclaimed drama, Before Night Falls (2000). Other roles include: Open Range; the prequel to Dirty Dancing, entitled Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights; The Terminal with Tom Hanks; and Criminal with John C. Reilly. Born Diego Luna Alexander in Mexico City, Luna is the son of Fiona Alexander, a British-born costume designer, and Alejandro Luna, a set designer who is one of the most acclaimed living theatre, cinema and opera set designers in Mexico. Luna began acting in television, film and theater at an early age, following the death of his mother when he was only two years old. His first television role was in El Último Fin de Año (1991). His next role in television’s El Abuelo y Yo (1992) was alongside his childhood best friend and future Canana Films partner, Gael García Bernal. Pablo Cruz (producer) Presenting Cochochi, Saturday, December 1, 3 pm, Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium, National Portrait Gallery Known as the business brain behind Canana Films, the shingle he founded with Mexican actors Gael Garcia Bernal and Diego Luna in 2003, Cruz works to develop socially minded projects that can’t find a home elsewhere. His latest film, Cochochi, is produced by Canana and directed by Laura Amelia Guzmán and Israel Cardenas. Pushing the bleeding edge of Mexico’s new wave of realism, Cruz’s films are meant to reflect the realities found in today’s Mexico and to effectuate change. Cruz started out as a cameraman after studying film theory at the London College of Printing. He ended up producing films in Africa and later founded the Lift, a successful TV advertising company in Spain. Cruz also cut a first-look deal for Canana with Focus Features – a landmark arrangement between a U.S. studio and a Mexican shingle. Fernando Eimbcke (writer, director) Presenting Duck Season (Temporada de Patos), Sunday, December 2nd, 1 pm, Baird Auditorium, National Museum of Natural History Fernando Eimbcke studied film at Centro Universitario de Estudios Cinematográficos (UNAM), where he wrote and directed several notable shorts including No Todo es Permanente, nominated as best documentary short by the Mexican Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1996. Following his participation in a scriptwriting workshop, Eimbcke won a contest in 2001 to produce the short La Suerte de la Fea a la Bonita no le Importa, which appeared in a number of national and international festivals including Celebrating the New Wave of Mexican Cinema About the Films Blood (Sangre) Directed by Amat Escalante (2005, 90 mins) (Saturday, December 1st, 6:30 pm, Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium, National Portrait Gallery) Co-produced by Carlos Reygadas, the author of Battle in Heaven, winner at the Cannes Film festival, Un Certain Regard, American Film Institute, Mexican Ariel’s, this first feature dealt with in a harsh tone everyday life of a couple of Mexicans. The film is incisive and corrosive to show the life of a warder of a public office and a woman who works as a waitress at a fast food restaurant. Sangre gets in the most intimate spaces of the couple to undress the effects of the passage of time, anxiety, boredom, and the mechanics with which it operates affection, violence, attachment, and a whole range of human contradictory feelings about love, life and death. This is a somewhat wild film, but also very contained, where its director quite naturally strikes against certain conventions widely in the representation of conventional film. Chávez Directed by Diego Luna (2007, 80 Mins ) (Friday, November 30th, 7 pm, Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium, National Portrait Gallery) After more than 20 films, Luna (Y Tu Mamá También, Frida) steps behind the camera as director of Chávez, a documentary about the life of the legendary boxer who won five world titles. “He’s Mexico’s biggest star of all time,” says actor Diego Luna. “In his years of glory, the only good news we had on TV in my country was related to him. Chávez was world champion for more than 10 years during crazy times…the assassination of presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio, the insurgent movement in Chiapas.” Chávez premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival and has played at festivals around the world. Cochochi Directed by Laura Amelia Guzmán’s and Israel Cárdenas (2007, 87 mins) (Saturday, December 1st, 3pm, Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium, National Portrait Gallery) This debut wonder is the simple story of a journey by Evaristo and Tony, indigenous brothers living in Okochoci, a small community located in Mexico’s rural northwest. Splendidly shot on 16mm and wonderfully acted by non-professionals (especially the two leads), Cochochi features breathtaking images of a region of Mexico little explored on film-not to mention a language that’s just as distinctive (the Tarahumaran dialect of Ráramuri). Though fabulistic and, at times, quite amusing, in tone, Cárdenas and Guzmán use their delicate narrative to explore a serious issue in the lives of any indigenous population-the question of whether to integrate with society at large by learning a new language and moving away from home, or holding onto traditional ways. By Cochochi’s end, important choices will have been made, and three sets of eyes will have been openedEvaristo’s, Tony’s, and the viewers’. Duck Season (Temporada de Patos) Directed by Fernando Eimbcke (2004, 90 mins) (Sunday, December 2nd, 1 pm, Baird Auditorium, National Museum of Natural History) With Temporada de Patos, writer/director Fernando Eimbcke lovingly brings a touching tale to life. Produced by Alfonso Cuarón Shot in black-and-white and on a minuscule budget, Eimbcke’s film is a slice-of-life comedy that takes place over the course of one day in a Mexico City apartment. Flama (Daniel Miranda) and Moko (Diego Catano) are two bored teenagers who plan a day of unsupervised fun together in Flama’s mother’s humble abode. Videogames, CocaCola, and pizza are high on their list of priorities, but things don’t quite go according to plan. First, a slightly older female neighbor, Rita (Danny Perea), arrives to bake a cake in the kitchen. Then the pizza man arrives and the boys challenge him to a soccer videogame as payment for the food. But when the power in the building cuts out mid-game the fun really starts as the foursome argue, clown around, and do anything they can to stave off the boredom that threatens to engulf them. Temporada de Patos conjures up a world all of its own, and is a welcome introduction to the cinematic mind of Fernando Eimbcke. The film won 7 Mayahueles in the Muestra de Cine Mexicano de Guadalajara as well as the FIPRESCI prize and was selected to participate in the 43é. Semaine de la Critique in Cannes (2004). Winner of 11 Ariel Awards in 2005, the film was included in more than 70 festivals and has been sold to more than 30 countries. The Violin (El Violin) Directed by Francisco Vargas (2005, 98 mins) Presented by Adriana Barraza. (Sunday, December 2nd, 4 pm, Baird Auditorium, National Museum of Natural History) An old Indian grandfather, Don Plutarco, plays violin and his son plays guitar, while his grandson collects pennies in a poor, rural Mexican town. This peasant family soon faces a life and death situation, and Don Plutarco generates a risky idea to help his son, using the gifts he has to offer: his courage, his dignity, and, his violin. The movie reveals how this family and the community live together, and it offers a poignant glimpse of how mainstream Mexican society works with its Indian neighbors in times of great need. The violinists’ passion inspires and makes this film a universal and moving story. Mexican Shorts (Five award-winning shorts) Ambulance Music (Música de Ambulancia) directed by Paula Markovitch (2006, 13 mins). Lucia, who is in her fifties, has cancer. Cecilia, her daughter, takes care of her. Illness distances them, but all of a sudden, a male nurse visits and they experience an absurd and surprisingly happy moment. (Sunday, December 2, 1pm) The Background Sirens (Sirenas de Fondo) directed by Arcadi Palerm (2006, 10 mins). Will the background sirens ever stop? (Friday, November 30, 7pm) Milk and Water (La Leche y el Agua) directed by Celso R. García (2006, 12 mins). A woman tries to get back her only companion in life – a cow. (Saturday, December 1, 6:30pm) The Miracle (El Milagro) directed by Ernesto Contreras (2000, 15 mins). The inhabitants of a small town witness a miracle that itself will not be repeated in a thousand years. Margarita wants to attend, but her husband believes it is all a farce. (Saturday, December 1, 3pm) A Mother’s Love (Amor de Madre) directed by Luis Urquiza (2006, 10 mins). Sofia is about to marry in Paris. She has come back to Mexico to say goodbye to her exboyfriend who is in a coma. Her ex-mother-in-law will do anything in her power to make Sofia stay at the side of her beloved son. (Sunday, December 2, 2pm) For more information, please visit our website at www.latino.si.edu or www.instituteofmexicodc.org or call us at (202) 728-1675. MEXICO AT THE S M I T H SO N I A N CELEBRATING the New Wave of Mexican Cinema Dear Friends of Mexican Cinema, t is an honor for me to welcome you to this celebration of artistic achievement in cinema. This festival, a partnership between the Smithsonian Latino Centre and the Mexican Cultural Institute, recognizes the creative contributions that Mexican artists make to U.S. culture through film. Mexico at the Smithsonian – Celebrating the New Wave of Mexican Cinema offers a wonderful opportunity for Mexico to display its budding and cutting-edge national talent and celebrate new concepts through one of the most powerful mediums in world history – film. I hope you can join me and many of the today’s top talent in honoring the most recent Mexican films over the course of this weekend. I would like to also take this opportunity to thank all the organizers and supporters whose efforts have made this fine festival a reality for all of us to enjoy. I am proud to be a part of this festival and through it celebrate the heritage and artistic achievement of Mexican filmmakers. Sincerely, T I he Smithsonian Latino Center is proud to be collaborating with the Mexican Cultural Institute in presenting Celebrating the New Wave of Mexican Cinema, part of the “Mexico at the Smithsonian” public program series. Mexican cinema is currently experiencing a second Golden Age—its impact is being felt all over the world, including the United States where directors such as Guillermo del Toro, Alfonso Cuarón and Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu have won Oscar nominations for their poignant work. These cinematic talents have inspired a new generation of Mexican filmmakers whose work is highlighted in this series of contemporary film screenings. With the participation of acclaimed actors Adriana Barraza, Diego Luna and the Mexico’s newest and most talented young directors, Celebrating the New Wave of Mexican Cinema is sure to intrigue and inspire. We look forward to seeing you at the movies! Pilar F. O’Leary Director, Smithsonian Latino Center Arturo Sarukhan Ambassador of Mexico Informatio n , T i c k e t s , V e n u e s & D i r e c t i o n s Tickets Venues O r g anizers All events are free and open to the public. Admission is available on a first-come, first-serve basis. To guarantee admission, you MUST be present at the venue 30 minutes prior to the scheduled start time. Tickets are available in advance at the venues 1 hour prior to the start of each event. For groups 10 or more, please email: cbidault@instituteofmexicodc.org or call (202) 728- 1675. Baird Auditorium, National Museum of Natural History: The museum is located at the intersection of 10th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW, in Washington, DC, 20560. The main phone number is (202) 633-1000. Directions: Smithsonian Station (Mall exit) on the Blue and Orange line. Mexican Cultural Institute is located at: 2829 16th Street, NW 20009 near the intersection of Columbia Road. To leave a message and for groups of 10 or more, please call: 202 728 1675. Directions: Columbia Heights Station (Green Line) Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium, National Portrait Gallery is located at 750 9th Street, NW, Washington, DC. The main phone number is (202) 633-1000. Directions: The gallery is conveniently located at Eighth and F Streets, NW, DC, 20001, above the Gallery Place-Chinatown Metrorail station (Red, Yellow and Green lines). Transportation: Try to use Public Transportation: The use of public transportation, including taxis, in Washington is recommended as on-street parking is extremely limited and traffic is often heavy. Parking There are few public parking facilities. On-street parking is limited and posted times are enforced. There are commercial parking lots and garages located within several blocks of the museums. There is also a limited number of parking spaces for vehicles with the appropriate license plate or permits for visitors with disabilities. Embassy of Mexico and Mexican Cultural Institute Arturo Sarukhan – Ambassador, Julian Ventura – Deputy Chief of Mission; Juan García de Oteyza – Cultural Attaché/Executive Director of MCI, Claudia Keller Lapayre – Deputy Director; Humberto Martinez – Arts programs; Alfonso Cacho – Administrator; Clarissa Minchew, Angel Lopez, Nazario Mendoza. Marina Stavenhagen Vargas, IMCINE Leonardo Garcia Tsao, Cinéteca Smithsonian Latino Center Pilar O´Leary - Director, Smithsonian Latino Center; Noralisa Leo - External Affairs Officer/Deputy Director, Smithsonian Latino Center; Ranald Woodaman, Exhibitions and Public Programs Director, Smithsonian Latino Center; Emily Key - Education Manager, Smithsonian Latino Center; Allison Jessing - Auditorium Program Coordinator, National Portrait Gallery; Tina Karl, Assistant Director for Special Events, National Museum of Natural History Festival Organizer: Carol Bidault de l’Isle Special Thanks To: Diana Backlund; Barbara Burnett, Burnett’s Travel; Katie Dahl, International Arts & Artists’ Design Studio; Leslie Keating, Leslie Keating Marketing LLC; Carlos Silva