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Wednesday, April 20, 2016
Wednesday, April 6, 2016
April 14: El abrazo de la serpiente
Monday, 5-7 McCormick Screening Room
El abrazo de la serpiente (2015) features a visually rich and disturbing exploration of the ravages of colonialism. The third feature by Ciro Guerra, the film was an Academy Award Nominee for Best Foreign Language Film in 2015. Serpiente centers on Karamakate, an Amazonian shaman and the last survivor of his people, following his relationship with two scientists over the course of 40 years. The film was inspired by the real-life journals of the explorers Theodor Koch-Grünberg and Richard Evans Schultes, who traveled through the Colombian Amazon in search of the sacred and difficult-to-find psychedelic Yakruna plant.
Ciro Guerra was born on Río de Oro (Cesar, Colombia) in 1981 and studied film and television at the National University of Colombia. At the age of 21, after directing four multi-award-winning short films, he wrote and directed La Sombra del Caminante, his feature directorial debut, which won awards at the San Sebastian, Toulouse, Mar de Plata, Trieste, Havana, Quito, Cartagena, Santiago, and Warsaw film festivals, and was selected for 60 more. (From http://embraceoftheserpent.oscilloscope.net/#)
April 15: Screening and Discussion with Director Diana Montero (Cuba)
Friday, 5-7, McCormick Screening Room
Diana Montero is a young filmmaker from Cuba, who studied Art
History at the University of Havana and documentary filmmaking at the
Film and Television School of San Antonio de los Baños. Her work often
focuses on women in rural Cuba, and includes the short documentary "Abecé: The Universe of a Girl, Mother and Woman” (2013), which
received honorable mention in the 13 Muestra Joven and the ICAIC,
and the International Festival of Cinema in Trinidad and Tobago, and
which chronicles the history of 12-year-old Leonedi and her infant child.
Her earlier work, “Milagrosa,” tells the story of the Dalkys, who lives in
the small community of La Salada, in Santiago de Cuba, and is known
as the community healer. Her documentary “Como los gatos,” looks at
the life of an 86-year-old man who, for the past decade, dedicated his
life to collecting garbage and recyclables.
April 18: Mestizo
Monday, 5-7, McCormick Screening Room
Mestizo is set in a village on the Venezuelan coast, a place of fishermen and big haciendas. Jose Ramon, son of a white aristocrat and a black fisher-women, is trying to define his own identity while dealing with social and sexual conflicts, power, culture, the law, and the impossible relationship he has with both of his parents. (From www.africanfilm.com/mestizo.htm).
Matio Handler is a director, photographer, and editor from Montevideo, Uruguay.
Mestizo is set in a village on the Venezuelan coast, a place of fishermen and big haciendas. Jose Ramon, son of a white aristocrat and a black fisher-women, is trying to define his own identity while dealing with social and sexual conflicts, power, culture, the law, and the impossible relationship he has with both of his parents. (From www.africanfilm.com/mestizo.htm).
Matio Handler is a director, photographer, and editor from Montevideo, Uruguay.
April 20: Screening A Dios Momo
Wednesday, 5-7, McCormick Screening Room
A Dios Momo Obdulio is an 11-year-old Afro-Uruguayan boy who lives with his grandmother and sells newspapers for a living while he cannot read or write. Obdulio is not interested in going to school until he finds out that the night watchman of the newspaper's office is a charismatic magical "Maestro" who not only introduces him to the world of literacy but also teaches him the real meaning of life through the lyrics of the "Murgas" (Carnival Pierrots) during the mythical nights of the irreverent and provocative Uruguayan carnival. (From www.africanfilm.com/Adios%20Momo.htm).
Leonardo Ricagni is a director based in Barcelona.
Tuesday, April 5, 2016
April 21: Moving Across the Diaspora: Black Visual Storytelling
Screening, Performance and Conversation
with filmmakers Kumi and Jalise Beamon, and performer Storyboard P.
Thursday, 5-7, McCormick Screening Room
Moderated by Sandra Johnson
Kumi is an artist, storyteller, and healer. Her current work focuses on using art and storytelling tool to heal from trauma.
Jalise Beamon is a student filmmaker from Chino, Ca. She is currently an undergraduate at the University of California, Irvine studying Film and Media and African American Studies. Jalise's short experimental films focus on Black folks and the ways in which they navigate themselves through structures of violence in order to live, love and dream.
Sandra Johnson is a 4th year graduating senior at UCI. She is an African-American Studies major, whose research on race relations in Cuba, "Anything But Black: A Contextual Analysis of the Afro-Cuban Experience in a Communist Regime," was presented in the 2015 UROP symposium.
April 11: Screening — Sara Gomez and Nicolás Guillén Landrián shorts
Monday, 5-7 McCormick Screening Room
Nicolás Guillén Landrián (1938-2003), nephew of poet Nicolas Guillen, was an Afrcocuban experimental filmmaker, painter and writer. He made 13 documentaries, all which focus on the lives of everyday people, not as part of the masses, but rather as individuals. His experimental films have been called irreverent and pointed, and were subject to heavy censorship. He was jailed twice, and institutionalized where it is said he underwent electroshock treatment. He immigrated to Miami in 1989.
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
April 4: Taller and Screening with Director Carlos Efraín Pérez Rojas
Carlos Efraín Pérez Rojas (Mixe) is a documentary videomaker who has focused his work on indigenous people, social movements, and human rights in Mexico. In 2005 he received the Reebok Human Rights Award, which honors activists under the age of 30, and included a grant to enable Pérez Rojas to continue his work. He was awarded a National Video Resources Media Arts Fellowship in 2002.
Taller, Noon, Location TBA
Join us for a screening of the short video "Mirando hacia dentro," and a discussion on documentary video making and the defense of human rights with director Carlos Perez. *Note: The taller will be conducted in Spanish.
Screening, 5-7 pm, McCormick Screening Room
Screening Dir. Carlos Perez's documentary Mëjk and its short companion video "Mood." The screening will be followed by a Q&A and discussion with the director.
Taller, Noon, Location TBA
Join us for a screening of the short video "Mirando hacia dentro," and a discussion on documentary video making and the defense of human rights with director Carlos Perez. *Note: The taller will be conducted in Spanish.
Screening, 5-7 pm, McCormick Screening Room
Screening Dir. Carlos Perez's documentary Mëjk and its short companion video "Mood." The screening will be followed by a Q&A and discussion with the director.
About Mëjk
Genaro Rojas — better known as “Naro” — takes us on a journey through the surreal and magical world of the Sierra Mixe in Oaxaca, Mexico. Naro enjoys dedicating time to adversities and fragments of daily life that may appear to lack any meaning, since he is able to explain how they form part of broader sociopolitical and philosophical contexts, an exercise he practices even when he teaches, dances, washes his clothes or gets a haircut. Following Naro through his daily life, the video provides insight into issues as diverse as Mexico's fraught education reform under President Peña Nieto and the social microcosm of Sierra Mixe's legendary bus drivers.
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
April 6: Raíces de mi corazón; Dir. Gloria Rolando
Gloria Rolando is an Afrocuban filmmaker who focuses primarily on the African diaspora in the Caribbean. She has worked with Instituto Cubano del Arte e Industria Cinematográficos for more than 35 years, and heads an independent film-making group, Imágenes del Caribe in Havana. She is the second woman in Cuba to have made a feature film, Raíces de mi corazón, which was released in 2001. She is also known for her documentary films Oggun: An Eternal Presence, about Cuban Yoruba singer Lazaro Ros; My Footsteps in Baragua, a recounting of the history of an English-speaking West Indian community in Cuba; and Eyes of the Rainbow, a documentary on Assata Shakur, the Black Panther and Black Liberation Army leader who took refuge in Cuba.
Screening, 5-7 pm, McCormick Screening Room
Raíces de mi corazón (from AfroCubaWeb):
Raíces de mi corazón (from AfroCubaWeb):
Mercedes, a Cuban woman from Havana, begins to decipher her family secrets through the photo of her great-grandparents, María Victoria y José Julián. Between reality and the world of her dreams, she will learn about the ties this couple -- especially her great-grandfather -- had with the Independents of Color, a political party formed in 1908. The struggle of these black men and women to create a space for themselves in Cuban society at the beginning of the 20th century had a tragic outcome: the massacre of 1912. Many families suffered, but history imposed a silence, the same silence that surrounds Mercedes' great-grandparents.
Monday, March 7, 2016
April 7th: Presentation by Julio Ramos *A Department of Spanish & Portuguese Event
Julio Ramos is professor emeritus at UC-Berkeley. Professor Ramos has published widely on topics such as 19th and 20th century Latin American Literature, Cultural Theory, and Latin American film. Ramos is the author of Desencuentros de la modernidad en América Latina en el siglo XIX, one of the most important studies about modernity in the Western Hemisphere. Ramos is also a filmmaker, and has written about two Afro-Cuban directors featured at this year's festival: Gloria Rolando and Guillén Landrián.
Presentation "Detroit's Rivera: Work, Public Art, and Film"
HG 1010 5-7PM
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