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The XXIII Festival Internacional de Cine en Guadalajara (Guadalajara International Film Festival), Mexico's highest profile film event, runs March 7-14, 2008, in the fabulous Guadalajara, Mexico's second largest city, considered the cradle of Mexican traditions. And now a film capital. In the last few years, the festival has consolidated its importance. The number of film-related events have increased to gargantuan proportions (from a busy film market to numerous workshops, conferences and more). Jorge Sánchez, the festival's director, a veteran film producer (responsible for many of Arturo Ripstein and María Novaro's films), recently announced an exciting and dynamic program. Highlights include what promise to be among the strongest offerings of Mexican films in some time and a focus on Argentina. GIFF is the best place to see the newest Mexican films, although it caters to commercial cinema and independent work does not usually occupy a prominent space.
Twelve films were selected to compete in the Mexican feature category. These include auteur Julián Hernández's fourth feature Rabioso sol, rabioso cielo (Angry Sun, Angry Sky), which I've heard runs over 3½ hours and was shot both in color and black and white on location in legendary Mexico City "gay" hotspots; Fernando Eimbcke's ¿Te acuerdas de Lake Tahoe?, his highly anticipated follow-up to Temporada de patos (Duck Season, 2004); Rodrigo Plá's second film Desierto adentro (Desert Deep), hot on the trail of his Venice award winning La zona (The Zone, 2007); Walter Doehner's El viaje de Teo (Teo's Trip), his first feature since his much talked about drama of erotic obsession, La habitación azul (The Blue Room, 2001); new work by the veteran actor-director Gabriel Retes Arresto domiciliario (House Arrest); and the ever prolific commercial filmmaker Fernando Sariñana, Enemigo's íntimos (Intimate Enemies), best known for Amar te duele (Love Hurts, 2002) and Ciudades oscuras (Dark Cities, 2002).
Other highlights include tributes to leading Mexican producer Bertha Navarro and to Mexican golden age period comedian, the late Germán Valdés (Tin Tán), the original border pachuco. All but one of the five films selected to represent Navarro's work correspond to major voices of distinct periods of new Mexican cinema: Guadalajara born Guillermo del Toro (Cronos [1993], El laberinto del fauno [Pan's Labyrinth, 2006]); Carlos Carrera (Un embrujo [Under a Spell, 1998]; Nicholás Echevarría (Cabeza de vaca [1991]; and Paul Leduc, veteran of the politically edgy new Mexican cinema of the 1970s. Navarro produced Leduc's first feature Reed: México insurgente (Reed: Insurgent Mexico, 1971) and his latest Cobrador: In God We Trust (2006). The Tin Tán tribute includes an exhibition of posters and photographs from the actor's family archive.
Argentina and Quebec are the two invited national cinemas highlighted this year. Three towering giants in Argentine cinema are being honored with tributes: Fernando Birri, father of the new Latin American Cinema; Fernando Solanas, co-author (with Octavio Getino) of both the most influential Latin American film theory, "Towards a Third Cinema" (1969) and of the monumental La hora de los hornos (The Hour of the Furnaces, 1968); and to producer Lita Stantic, responsible for spearheading among the most dynamic films of the new Argentine cinema. The six films by Birri include the classic social documentary Tire dié (Throw Me a Dime, 1958-60), the neo-realist popular film Los inundados (Flooded Out, 1961); and two of his latest: Za 05 (2006), a tribute to his teacher, neo-realist Italian scriptwriter Cesare Zavatini, and Elegía Friulana (Friuli Elegy, 2007). In addition to the incendiary and emblematic militant documentary La hora de los hornos, the tribute to Solanas includes Tango, el exhilio de Gardel (Tango: the Exile of Gardel, 1985), Sur (South, 1988), and his latest Argentina latente (Latent Argentina), the last installment of the documentary trilogy about the causes and effect of Argentina's most recent economic crisis and the popular resistance to the adoption of neoliberal policies that began with Memoria del saqueo (Social Genocide, 2004). Scheduled to represent Stantic's contributions are her rarely seen directorial debut Un muro de silencio (A Wall of Silence, 1993), Lucrecia Martel's La ciénaga (The Swamp, 2001) and Diego Lerner's Tan de repente (Suddenly, 2002).
Also included in the Argentine focus is a tribute to legendary actor Isabel Sarli, an event I am terribly excited about since she is central in shaping the erotic fantasies of millions of Latin Americans from the late 1950s through the 1970s and into the 80s. Sarli has an international cult following. She is a pioneer of Latin American erotic cinema, having worked actively during periods of dictatorships and censorship, and is certainly one of Latin America's most infamous and intriguing sexploitation actors. Sarli will attend the festival and La diosa virgen (The Virgin Goddess, Armando Bo) will be screened.
Rounding out this national focus is the section, "Joven e independiente—Cine argentino de la última década" (Young and Independent—Argentine Cinema from the Last Decade). Scheduled features include work by the now renown directors Lisandro Alonso, Adrián Caetano, Pablo Trapero, Albertina Carri, Daniel Burman, and Lucrecia Martel. Finally, there will be a selection of classic films in the section, "75 años de Sonofilms." Sonofilms is one of two studios responsible for the creation of a great majority of films that constitute the golden age of Argentine cinema in the 1930s and 40s, a period in which this studio popularized tangos around the globe.
Cross-published on Twitch.