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Showing posts with label corto circuito. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corto circuito. Show all posts

CORTO CIRCUITO, THE LATINO SHORTS FILM FEST STARTS IN NYC

Posted by LATINO EVENTS Y TESPIS MAGAZINE on Thursday, October 4, 2012 , under , , , , , , , , , , | comments (0)




Tespis Magazine, our sister site, is a proud sponsors of the Ninth annual Corto Circuito, the Latino Short Film Festival of New York, and we are thrilled to be part of it as well!.
The festival, organized by New York University's King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center (KJCC) and film programmer Diana Vargas, runs at the KJCC Auditorium from Thursday, October 4 to Saturday October 6 and presents a varied selection of the most acclaimed and influential Latin American, Spanish, and US- based Latino films of recent years. 

  
More than 45 titles will be presented, including award-winning short films in fiction and documentary, as well as some experimental works that resist easy classification and push at the boundaries of established structures and formats. The selections come from Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Chile, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru, Spain, Uruguay, Venezuela, and the U.S.

"Being in our ninth year, we can say that Corto Circuito's role has been to bring movies that New Yorkers probably wouldn't see otherwise, but, also, to strengthen the bridge between Hispanic cultures, and New York audiences" states Diana Vargas, director of Corto Circuito. "We are in our ninth edition and still going strong: we must be doing something right. For the past nine years we have consistently been putting together programs to showcase our cultures. Thanks to Cortocircuito, we have been bringing to New York a plethora of amazing works by Spanish and Latino American filmmakers. I hope we will continue to do so," adds Laura Turégano, KJCC's Associate Director and co-organizer of the festival. 

HERE IS THE LINE-UP. WE HOPE TO SEE YOU AT THE FESTIVAL!.

* Thursday October 4th, 7 pm,, with the award-winning films:L (Thais Fuginaga, Brazil), winner at Sao Paulo Film Festival, Berlin Film Festival; Los anfitriones (Miguel Moulet, Cuba-Peru), Third Prize CinéFondation at Cannes Film Festival); Los Retratos (Colombia), Special Jury Mention at Locarno Film Festival;Lagun Mina (Spain), Best Short at Cinemad, Madrid; Requiem para la eternidad (Mexico) Best Documentary at Morelia Film Festival; De qué se ríen las hienas (Javier Veiga, Spain), Best Short at Icaro Film Festival; Animales de alquiler (Pablo Ortega, Costa Rica) Best Short Festival del Nuevo Cine Latinoamericano, La Habana. 

* Friday, October 5th, Corto Circuito begins at 7 pm with a program of experimental films, both narrative and documentary, from Cuba, Costa Rica, Spain and Colombia. Then to celebrate the work of those filmmakers who have chosen to explore the complex issues of human rights, Corto Circuito will present Things that Matter, a program that aims to engage the audience in the pertinent issues of human rights. In collaboration with Fundación 10.12.48. 

* Saturday, October 6th, the Festival starts at 3:00 p.m. with a selection of Film Schools program. The School of Film and Television of San Antonio de los Baños, Cuba –EICTV, The Universidad del Cine from Buenos Aires, and Mexico's Centro de Capacitación CInematográfica -CCC, will present the most recent films made by their students. A selection includes the films that have competed in important festivals such as Cannes, Guadalajara, and Locarno. 

At 4:30 p.m. Corto Circuito will present a special selection of Uruguayan Shorts that have been awarded at La Pedrera Short Film Festival and Uruguay International Short Film Festival (FICU); both events take place annually in Montevideo, Uruguay and are directed by Sergio Miranda. The films are: Reino Plástico by Maximiliano Conteti & Guillermo Kloetzer, Mojarra and Colchones both directed by Lucia Garibaldi and El olor de aquel lugar by Andres Boero. 

* Saturday, October 6th at 6:00 p.m., the following participating shorts, that were hand-picked from close to 250 films submitted to the festival this year, will be screened: Gatos (Natalia Sprenger, Spain); Hunger (Mario de la Torre, Spain); Él (Lidice Abreu, Venezuela); Chapstick (Juan Manuel Mendez, Guatemala); Memorias del viento (Katherine Harder, Chile); De aqui pa'allá (Joelle Lager, Puerto Rico); Ensayo de actores (Jesus Monroy, Spain). 

 

The closing program, at 7:30 p.m., will feature Talent in the House, shorts by Latino directors living in the United States: Rush (Juan Fischer), The Black Eagle (Oscar Frasser), Comedy (Pablo Herran),Black Hole (Monica Walters), Behind The Mirror (Julio Ramos), Kyakä La Na (Adriana Cepeda) and Free Expression (Martin & Facundo Lombard.) Followed by a Closing Night Party with DJ Funkenstein. 

Details:When: From Thursday October 4 to Saturday October 6, 2012 
Hours: Thursday and Friday at 7 pm, Saturday at 3:00, 4:30, 6:00 and 7:30 pm 
Where: King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center, NYU. 53 Washington Square South (Bet Sullivan and Thompson Streets) 
Trains: A, B, C, E, F, y M to West 4 and 1 to Christopher Street. 
Price: Free 
More Info at: www.cortocircuito.us click here/ www.nyu.edu/kjc 
All foreign language films are subtitled in English.

NY ESSENTIALS: CINEMA. UPDATED!

Posted by LATINO EVENTS Y TESPIS MAGAZINE on Wednesday, January 18, 2012 , under , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | comments (0)



This is the updated listing of the best cinema in town for the months of January and February.

* Lula, Son of Brazil, a Film by Fábio Barreto >> Opens on January 13 at the Lincoln Plaza Cinemas and at Quad Cinema.


* Global Lens, 2012 > Enero 12–28 > MoMA > With the following pictures from Latin America:

- Riscado (Craft) 2010. Brazil. Directed by Gustavo Pizzi.
- El Dedo (The Finger) 2011. Argentina. Directed by Sergio Teubal.
- El Premio (The Prize) 2011. Argentina/Mexico. Written and directed by Paula Markovitch.
- Gordo, Calvo y Bajito (Fat, Bald, Short Man) 2011. Colombia. Directed by Carlos Osuna.

  
* Miss Bala. De Gerardo Naranjo > Entrada de México a los Oscar 2012 > En Cartelera Enero 20 > The Angelika.




* THE CINEMA TROPICAL FESTIVAL > Enero 21 y 22.
Cinema Tropical in partnership with 92YTribeca is proud to launch a new annual festival celebrating the year’s best Latin American film productions. The festival features the winners of the Cinema Tropical AWARDS, which were announced at a ceremony at The New York Times’ headquarters on December 1 > Octubre, Leap Year (Año Bisiesto), Nostalgia For The Light, and The Tiniest Place (El Lugar Más Pequeño) >> 92 Y Tribeca. 

Sat, Jan 21
OCTUBRE – WINNER: BEST FEATURE FILM

Clemente, a moneylender of few words, is a new hope for Sofía, his single neighbor devoted to the October worship of Our Lord of the Miracles. They're brought together over a new-born baby, the fruit of Clemente's relationship with a prostitute who's nowhere to be found. While Clemente is looking for the child’s mother, Sofía cares for the baby and looks after the moneylender's house. With the arrival of these beings in his life, Clemente has the opportunity to reconsider his emotional relations with people. Octubre, the first feature film from Peruvian brothers Daniel and Diego Vega, is a deadpan dark comedy incorporating influences ranging from Jim Jarmush and Aki Kaurismaki to Robert Bresson, and winner of the Jury Prize at Cannes Film Festival-Un Certain Regard.
Director: Daniela and Diego Vega. 83 min. 2010. 35mm.
Peru. In Spanish with English subtitles. 

Sat, Jan 21
LEAP YEAR (AÑO BISIESTO) – WINNER: BEST DIRECTOR, FEATURE FILM
Michael Rowe’s debut feature film, winner of the Camera d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival, tells the story of Laura, a young journalist living an isolated life in a cramped Mexico City flat who is not lucky in love. The banality of her daily life stands in stark contrast to her nightly pursuit of sex and love. These short-lived affairs barely take the edge off her isolation, but then she meets the brooding, would-be actor Arturo. Their chemistry ignites feelings in Laura that leave her deeply troubled. The two embark on an increasingly dangerous sadomasochistic relationship in which pleasure, pain and love merge. Their physical relationship seems headed for a very dark place as her secret past resurfaces, pushing Arturo to the limit in this intense, powerful and at times deeply unsettling movie.
Director: Michael Rowe. 94 min. 2010. 35mm.
Mexico. In Spanish with English subtitles. 

 Sun, Jan 22.
NOSTALGIA FOR THE LIGHT – WINNER: BEST DOCUMENTARY
Patricio Guzmán’s latest film is a meditation on memory, history and eternity. Chile’s remote Atacama Desert, 10,000 feet above sea level, provides stunningly clear views of the heavens. But it also holds secrets from the past—preserved corpses, from pre-Columbian mummies to recent explorers, miners and disappeared political prisoners. In this otherworldly place, earthly and celestial quests meld: archaeologists dig for ancient civilizations, women search for their dead and astronomers scan the skies for new galaxies.
Director: Patricio Guzmán. 90 min. 2010. 35mm.
France/Germany/Chile. In Spanish with English subtitles.  

 Sun, Jan 22.
THE TINIEST PLACE (EL LUGAR MÁS PEQUEÑO) – WINNER: BEST FIRST FILM AND BEST DIRECTOR, DOCUMENTARY FILM
Hailed as “one of the most impressive debuts by a Mexican filmmaker” by Robert Koehler (Variety), Huezo’s remarkable film tells the story of Cinquera, a tiny place nestled in the mountains amidst the humid jungle that was ravaged by the bloody civil war that swept El Salvador between 1980 and 1992. The powerful and hypnotic documentary depicts a community that has learned to live with its sorrow, an annihilated town that re-emerges through the strength and deep love of its inhabitants for the land and people. With a lyrical eye, Huezo interweaves the simplicity of the town’s present life with tragic testimonies of the past. The Tiniest Place is ultimately a story of resilience, hope and the ability of the human being to reinvent himself after surviving a tragedy. 
Director: Tatiana Huezo. 104 min. 2010. 35mm.
Mexico. In Spanish with English subtitles. 
 
EL PRIMER EUROPEO > 24 de Enero > Premiere Americana >>  Instituto Cervantes.

* The Artist. De Michel Hazanavicius. Con Jean Dujardin y Berenice Bejo. A B&W silent movie. En Cartelera > The Angelika and BAMCinemas.



* LA PIEL QUE HABITO. De Pedro Almodovar. En Cartelera > Quad Cinema.


* Margin Call. With Zachary Quinto, who acts and produces. En Cartelera.


* 40th edition of Dance on Camera >> January 27-31 > Film Society of Lincoln Center >> FILMLINC.


* The Contenders 2011 >> Hasta Enero 30 >> MoMA >>

- Pariah 2011. USA. Directed by Dee Rees. Jan. 4

>> MoMA
* VIDEOTECA DEL SUR >> Cine Latinoamericano >> Videoteca.

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>
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* The Last Modernist: The Complete Works of Béla Tarr from February 3-8, 2012. In advance of the U.S. Theatrical Premiere of his latest great film The Turin Horse on February 10th >> FILMLINC.


*   CHICO & RITA > De  Fernando Trueba > En Cartelera Febrero 10 > The Angelika.

 
* Cinematic Goddess: American Sex Symbol, The Films of Raquel Welch
February 10-14 >>
FILMLINC.

NY ESSENTIALS: CINEMA / ENERO

Posted by LATINO EVENTS Y TESPIS MAGAZINE on Sunday, January 1, 2012 , under , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | comments (0)



El comienzo del año nos trae la oportunidad de ver Black Bread, la selección española al Oscar 2011 y que se presenta en el Instituto Cervantes. Y lo mejor de todo es que es gratuito! Eso si, espacio reducido, asi que apunten!.
Además tenemos:

* First Look series > New showcase for international cinema. The series introduces 13 new features and 7 short films—many of them New York premieres >>  January 6 -15 >> Moving Image Museum >> The series includes:


_ Chantal Akerman's Almayer’s Folly.
_ Théo Court's Ocaso.
_ Christoph Hochhausler’s The City Below.
_ Johnnie To’s Life Without Principle.
_ Raya Martin's Buenas Noches, España.
_ Valerie Massadian’s Nana.
_  Lisandro Alonso's Untitled (Letter to Serra).

_ Philippe Garrel’s That Summer.
_ Goncalo Tocha’s It’s the Earth Not the Moon.
_ Pietro Marcello's The Silence of Peleshian (Il silenzio di Pelesjan).
_ Andrei Zvyagintsev's Elena.

 

 * EL SICARIO: ROOM 164
 (Gianfranco Rosi, USA/ France, 2010, 84 min. In Spanish with English subtitles.) December 28 -  January 3 >> Film Forum


* Looking back at Agustí Villaronga >
>> January 11 >>
 The sea (Spain, 2000. 111 min)
 _ Aro Tolbukhin: In the Mind of a Killer (Spain, 2002. 95 min)
 2 screenings. Free entrance. 

>> January 12 >>
_ Black Bread >> Spain's nominee for this year's Academy Award for Best Foreign Film.


>> Instituto Cervantes.

* Lula, Son of Brazil, a Film by Fábio Barreto
January 12. Film Screening and Reception > Americas Society.
Opens on January 13 at the Lincoln Plaza Cinemas and at Quad Cinema.


* Global Lens, 2012 > Enero 12–28 > MoMA > With the following pictures from Latin America:


- Riscado (Craft) 2010. Brazil. Directed by Gustavo Pizzi.
- El Dedo (The Finger) 2011. Argentina. Directed by Sergio Teubal.
- El Premio (The Prize) 2011. Argentina/Mexico. Written and directed by Paula Markovitch.
- Gordo, Calvo y Bajito (Fat, Bald, Short Man) 2011. Colombia. Directed by Carlos Osuna.

>> MoMA
 




* THE CINEMA TROPICAL FESTIVAL > Enero 21 y 22.

Cinema Tropical in partnership with 92YTribeca is proud to launch a new annual festival celebrating the year’s best Latin American film productions. The festival features the winners of the Cinema Tropical AWARDS, which were announced at a ceremony at The New York Times’ headquarters on December 1 > Octubre, Leap Year (Año Bisiesto), Nostalgia For The Light, and The Tiniest Place (El Lugar Más Pequeño) >> 92 Y Tribeca. 

Sat, Jan 21
OCTUBRE – WINNER: BEST FEATURE FILM
Clemente, a moneylender of few words, is a new hope for Sofía, his single neighbor devoted to the October worship of Our Lord of the Miracles. They're brought together over a new-born baby, the fruit of Clemente's relationship with a prostitute who's nowhere to be found. While Clemente is looking for the child’s mother, Sofía cares for the baby and looks after the moneylender's house. With the arrival of these beings in his life, Clemente has the opportunity to reconsider his emotional relations with people. Octubre, the first feature film from Peruvian brothers Daniel and Diego Vega, is a deadpan dark comedy incorporating influences ranging from Jim Jarmush and Aki Kaurismaki to Robert Bresson, and winner of the Jury Prize at Cannes Film Festival-Un Certain Regard.
Director: Daniela and Diego Vega. 83 min. 2010. 35mm.
Peru. In Spanish with English subtitles. 

 Sat, Jan 21
LEAP YEAR (AÑO BISIESTO) – WINNER: BEST DIRECTOR, FEATURE FILM
Michael Rowe’s debut feature film, winner of the Camera d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival, tells the story of Laura, a young journalist living an isolated life in a cramped Mexico City flat who is not lucky in love. The banality of her daily life stands in stark contrast to her nightly pursuit of sex and love. These short-lived affairs barely take the edge off her isolation, but then she meets the brooding, would-be actor Arturo. Their chemistry ignites feelings in Laura that leave her deeply troubled. The two embark on an increasingly dangerous sadomasochistic relationship in which pleasure, pain and love merge. Their physical relationship seems headed for a very dark place as her secret past resurfaces, pushing Arturo to the limit in this intense, powerful and at times deeply unsettling movie.
Director: Michael Rowe. 94 min. 2010. 35mm.
Mexico. In Spanish with English subtitles. 

 Sun, Jan 22.
NOSTALGIA FOR THE LIGHT – WINNER: BEST DOCUMENTARY
Patricio Guzmán’s latest film is a meditation on memory, history and eternity. Chile’s remote Atacama Desert, 10,000 feet above sea level, provides stunningly clear views of the heavens. But it also holds secrets from the past—preserved corpses, from pre-Columbian mummies to recent explorers, miners and disappeared political prisoners. In this otherworldly place, earthly and celestial quests meld: archaeologists dig for ancient civilizations, women search for their dead and astronomers scan the skies for new galaxies.
Director: Patricio Guzmán. 90 min. 2010. 35mm.
France/Germany/Chile. In Spanish with English subtitles. 

 Sun, Jan 22.
THE TINIEST PLACE (EL LUGAR MÁS PEQUEÑO) – WINNER: BEST FIRST FILM AND BEST DIRECTOR, DOCUMENTARY FILM
Hailed as “one of the most impressive debuts by a Mexican filmmaker” by Robert Koehler (Variety), Huezo’s remarkable film tells the story of Cinquera, a tiny place nestled in the mountains amidst the humid jungle that was ravaged by the bloody civil war that swept El Salvador between 1980 and 1992. The powerful and hypnotic documentary depicts a community that has learned to live with its sorrow, an annihilated town that re-emerges through the strength and deep love of its inhabitants for the land and people. With a lyrical eye, Huezo interweaves the simplicity of the town’s present life with tragic testimonies of the past. The Tiniest Place is ultimately a story of resilience, hope and the ability of the human being to reinvent himself after surviving a tragedy. 
Director: Tatiana Huezo. 104 min. 2010. 35mm.
Mexico. In Spanish with English subtitles. 
 
EL PRIMER EUROPEO > 24 de Enero > Premiere Americana >>  Instituto Cervantes.

* The Artist. De Michel Hazanavicius. Con Jean Dujardin y Berenice Bejo. A B&W silent movie. En Cartelera > The Angelika and BAMCinemas.

Berenice Bejo, star of The Artist. Photo: ®AlexGuerrero 2011
* LA PIEL QUE HABITO. De Pedro Almodovar. En Cartelera > Quad Cinema.


PEDRO ALMODOVAR. Photo: ®AlexGuerrero 2011

* Margin Call. With Zachary Quinto, who acts and produces. En Cartelera.


* 40th edition of Dance on Camera >> January 27-31 > Film Society of Lincoln Center >> FILMLINC.


* The Contenders 2011 >> Hasta Enero 30 >> MoMA >>

- Pariah 2011. USA. Directed by Dee Rees. Jan. 4
>> MoMA
 
* VIDEOTECA DEL SUR >> Cine Latinoamericano >> Videoteca.

>
>
>
* The Last Modernist: The Complete Works of Béla Tarr from February 3-8, 2012. In advance of the U.S. Theatrical Premiere of his latest great film The Turin Horse on February 10th >> FILMLINC.


* Cinematic Goddess: American Sex Symbol, The Films of Raquel Welch
February 10-14 >>
FILMLINC.

NY ESSENTIALS: CINEMA IN DECEMBER

Posted by LATINO EVENTS Y TESPIS MAGAZINE on Wednesday, December 7, 2011 , under , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | comments (0)



Dos de los grandes eventos del cine Latino se llevan a cabo en Diciembre. A saber, Iberoamerican Images en el MoMA y Spanish Cinema Now en el Lincoln Center.
También, una de las mejores películas del año, The Artist, también está en cartelera. Una gema moderna del cine mudo y en blanco y negro con las actuaciones de Jean Dujardin (francés) y Berenice Bejo (argentina). 
Zachary Quinto sigue en cartelera con su película Margin Call, basada en la crisis financiera en Wall Street en el 2008. Y por supuesto la última de Almódovar, La piel que habito.                      
                             CINEMA

* Iberoamérican Images >> A treat of Latin American, Spanish, and Portuguese films > Museum of Modern Art > December 1–15 >> MoMA

The Strange Case of Angelica. Cortesía MoMA.

20th edition of SPANISH CINEMA NOW > Diciembre 9-22 >> Con una retrospectiva dedicada al director Luis García Berlanga. >> FILM SOCIETY.

* The Artist. De Michel Hazanavicius. Con Jean Dujardin y Berenice Bejo. A B&W silent movie. En Cartelera.
* LA PIEL QUE HABITO. De Pedro Almodovar. En Cartelera.


* Margin Call. With Zachary Quinto, who acts and produces. En Cartelera.



* The Contenders 2011 >> Hasta Enero 30 >> MoMA >>

- MISS BALA. 2011.
Mexico. Directed by Gerardo Naranjo >> Dec. 29.
- Melancholia. 2011. Denmark/Sweden/France/Germany. Directed by Lars von Trier >> Dec 29.
- Margin Call. 2011. USA. Written and directed by J.C. Chandor. >> Dec. 30
- Pariah 2011. USA. Directed by Dee Rees. Jan. 4
>> MoMA

* EL SICARIO: ROOM 164
 (Gianfranco Rosi, USA/ France, 2010, 84 min. In Spanish with English subtitles.) December 28 -  January 3 >> Film Forum

*  Late-Night Favorites
LA MONTAÑA SAGRADA / THE HOLY MOUNTAIN
(Alejandro Jodorowsky, Mexico, 1973, 114 min.)
December 23-25, and December 30 - January 1 >> IFC Center.
 
* VIDEOTECA DEL SUR >> Cine Latinoamericano >> Videoteca.

* Looking back at Agustí Villaronga >
>> January 11 >>
 The sea (Spain, 2000. 111 min)
 _ Aro Tolbukhin: In the Mind of a Killer (Spain, 2002. 95 min)
 2 screenings. Free entrance. 

>> January 12 >>
_ Black Bread >> Spain's nominee for this year's Academy Award for Best Foreign Film.


>> Instituto Cervantes.

* The Last Modernist: The Complete Works of Béla Tarr from February 3-8, 2012. In advance of the U.S. Theatrical Premiere of The Turin Horse on February 10th >> FILMLINC.






NY ESSENTIALS IN NOVEMBER: CINEMA

Posted by LATINO EVENTS Y TESPIS MAGAZINE on Monday, November 7, 2011 , under , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | comments (0)



                         CINEMA




* ELITE SQUAD: THE ENEMY WITHIN. José Padilha, Brasil, 2011. Opens today at AMC Empire 25 >> ELITE

* 24th MIX New York Queer Experimental Film Festival > November 15- 20 > The MIX Factory > QUEER

* Tender Muscles: Five Films by Charles Fairbanks > November 17 > Anthology Film Archives > FAIRBANKS

* MoMA's Ninth International Festival of Film Preservation > October 14 - November 19 > Features an accompanying Jack Smith retrospective and Mario Montez, Superstar >> MOMA.

SHORT FILMS FROM VENEZUELA. November 8. En Tribeca Cinemas. 
- Happy Endings by Marcel Rasquin.
- La Uva by Alexandra Henao.
- She is the One by Luis Carlos Hueck.
- La Playa by Virginia Urreiztieta.
- Tio Rico by Alexis Gambis.
- Lucy & Ricky by Jesús Rodríguez
- Mar Blindado by Gerard Uzcátegui
- Jesús TV by Gastón Goldmann
- 900 Pánico by Hernán Jabes,
- Jagger by Gabriel Flores. 

VENEZUELANS NYC FESTIVAL >> VNYCF

* The Sons of Joao, the Admirable New Baiano World (Filhos de Joao, Admiravel Mundo Novo) > Nov 10 > 92YTribeca >> FILHOS.
* LA PIEL QUE HABITO. De Pedro Almodovar. En Cartelera.



* Butch Cassidy is back! >> BLACKTHORN de Mateo Gil. En CARTELERA.

* VIDEOTECA DEL SUR: Cine Latinoamericano. Nov. 8, 15, 22, 29 >> Videoteca.

* DZI Croquettes > Directed by: Raphael Alvarez & Tatiana Issa >> Nov. 18 - 24 >> IFC Center.

 



* SENNA (Asif Kapadia, UK/France/USA, 2010, 106 min.). Landmark Sunshine Cinema >> SENNA. 

NY ESSENTIALS >> CINE LATINO.

Posted by LATINO EVENTS Y TESPIS MAGAZINE on Tuesday, October 4, 2011 , under , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | comments (0)






PROUD SPONSORS 

8vo. CORTO CIRCUITO: LATINO SHORTS FESTIVAL. CENTRO REY JUAN CARLOS I DE NYU >>  6 al 8 de Octubre >> CORTO CIRCUITO.



* LA TOMA. Se presenta en el New York Times Building. Octubre 3. FREE. A collaboration of VOCES, The Latino Heritage Network of The New York Times Company and Cinema Tropical. >> LA TOMA.


* SENNA (Asif Kapadia, UK/France/USA, 2010, 106 min.). Landmark Sunshine Cinema. Website. 


* 49th New York Film Festival. Septiembre 30 a Octubre 16 >> NYFF.
+ LA PIEL QUE HABITO + MISS BALA + EL ESTUDIANTE + THE LONELIEST PLANET + CORPO CELESTE + INVASION.

* Butch Cassidy is back! >> BLACKTHORN de Mateo Gil. Abre Octubre 7.

* VIDEOTECA DEL SUR: ESTUDIOS DE MOVIMIENTO y BOMBADEIRA. Octubre 4 >> Videoteca.


* Second Peruvian Contemporary Film Showcase. Octubre 4. Instituto Cervantes >> Cine Peru.

* LA PIEL QUE HABITO. De Pedro Almodovar. En Cartelera.


* Uruguay Film Festival at NYU. Centro Rey Juan Carlos I 
October 18-24, 2011 >> URUGUAY.