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Still from Mute.
For over 15 years, Ibermedia has been essential in the ascent of Latin American, Spanish, and Portuguese filmmaking. The intergovernmental agency began with seven member countries; today films from over 20 member countries appear on festival schedules and in cinemas the world over.
Ibermedia facilitates and finances co-productions of documentaries and fiction films between its Spanish- and Portuguese-language member countries, and grants money for international distribution and promotion. Professional film organizations from each country sponsoring a proposal select the projects to be helped by the Ibermedia umbrella, thus ensuring each project’s autonomy. Ibermedia has supported over 600 films and provided training for filmmaking professionals
MoMA’s fourth biannual Ibermedia -The State of The Art program offers a number of films that have U.S. distribution and/or a healthy festival run behind them. The museum will present a treasure trove of offerings from filmmakers who seldom get to show their work in the U.S.
Perhaps her most accomplished feature yet, Mercedes Moncada Rodríques' stunning, heartbreaking Magic Words (Breaking a Spell) opens the festival with a weeklong run.
Films by promising new talents from Uruguay, Cuba, and Colombia appear alongside work by seasoned filmmakers like Brazil’s Lúcia Murat, capturing a stirring picture of the state of the medium today, in all its variety and splendor.
Several filmmakers will be present to introduce their films, and on May 3, a special screening and round-table discussion takes place at New York University’s King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center in conjunction withthe exhibition. All films are in Spanish with English subtitles, unless otherwise noted.
The series is organized by Film Department Curator Jytte Jensen with curatorial intern Jesse Cumming. Prints courtesy the filmmakers and Films Boutique, Film Movement, Habanero Films, Memento Films, Sony Pictures Classics, Talga Films, and Urban Distribution International.
Screening Schedule
Thursday, May 1
7:00p
Palabras mágicas (Para romper un entendimiento) (Magic Words [Breaking a Spell])
2012 Mexico/Guatemala 82 min]
Written and directed by Mercedes Moncada Rodríguez
In the vein of Chris Marker’s finest essay films, Mercedes Moncada’s Magic Words is both sweeping and deeply personal, exploring 40 years of Nicaraguan history with a voice that is equally erudite, poetic, and indignant. Tracing the fraught Sandinista revolution throughout the 1980s and its aftermath, Moncada examines the impact of grand ideologies, politics, and lingering memories on communities and individuals, in many ways still left raw and reeling. To echo a quote from Marker’s Sans Soleil, Moncada seems to demand: “Who says that time heals all wounds?” Introduced by Moncada.
Friday, May 2
4:00
El Mudo (The Mute)
2013 Peru/Mexico 90 min.
Written and directed by Daniel Vega Vidal, Diego Vega Vidal
With Fernando Bacilio, Lidia Rodríguez, Juan Luis Maldonado
Judge Constantino Zegarra has earned his name as an incorruptible stalwart with an impressive conviction rate. Impervious to sob stories and appeals, he has also earned many enemies, any one of whom could be behind a conspiracy that leaves him demoted and—after a bullet strikes him in the neck—mute. Smart and shrewd (a kind of black comedy version of Michael Haneke’s Caché), The Mute is an exciting and exceedingly fresh take on the political thriller.
7:00
Palabras mágicas (Para romper un entendimiento) (Magic Words [Breaking a Spell])
Saturday, May 3
1:30
Palabras mágicas (Para romper un entendimiento) (Magic Words [Breaking a Spell])
4:00
Yvy Maraey: Tierra sin mal (Yvy Maraey: Land without Evil)
2013 Bolivia/Mexico 107 min.
Written and directed by Juan Carlos Valdivia
Based on a story by Valdivia, Elio Ortíz.
With Valdivia, Ortíz
A well-off metropolitan filmmaker hoping to retrace the trail of an early Swedish documentarian travels to the Bolivian highlands in search of savages. Once there, however, he finds his privileged cultural position met with ire more often than awe. Including allusions to documentary classics like Nanook of the North, Valdivia’s film moves beyond the plot itself to probe larger questions of memory, the politics of representation, and the power of cinema, all with sophistication and grace. Valdivia will be present.
NYU King Juan Carlos I Center
53 Washington Square South.
Sunday, May 4
2:00
Palabras mágicas (Para romper un entendimiento) (Magic Words [Breaking a Spell])
5:00
Yvy Maraey: Tierra sin mal (Yvy Maraey: Land without Evil)
Writer/director Juan Carlos Valdivia will be present.
Monday, May 5
4:00
Palabras mágicas (Para romper un entendimiento) (Magic Words [Breaking a Spell])
Tuesday, May 6
4:00
No
2012 Chile/Mexico 118 min.
Directed by Pablo Larraín
Screenplay by Pedro Peirano, based on the play by Antonio Skármeta.
With Gael García Bernal, Alfredo Castro, Antonia Zegers
Set during the 1988 Chilean referendum challenging the rule of President Augusto Pinochet, the fast-moving, entertaining (and Oscar-nominated) No concludes Pablo Larraín’s unofficial trilogy of films detailing life under the former dictator. Gael García Bernal plays René, a bright young ad man enlisted to boost the “No” campaign. To recreate the feel of the era (and seamlessly integrate actual ads and television reports), Larraín shot the film on U-matic magnetic tape.
7:00
Palabras mágicas (Para romper un entendimiento) (Magic Words [Breaking a Spell])
Wednesday, May 7
4:00
Palabras mágicas (Para romper un entendimiento) (Magic Words [Breaking a Spell])
7:00
A Memória que me contam (Memories They Told Me)
2013 Brazil/Chile 95 min.
Directed by Lúcia Murat
Screenplay by Murat, Tatiana Salem Levy
With Franco Nero, Irene Ravache, Simone Spoladore.
Though the film is set in present-day Brazil, the past hangs palpably over Memories They Told Me. With their friend and former comrade Ana on her deathbed, a group of aging revolutionaries are reunited and forced to grapple with their former accomplishments, failures, and lingering resentments. Wary of self-aggrandizing nostalgia or romanticism, Murat offers an honest, complicated look at youthful idealism and the often uneasy overlap between the personal and the political. In Portuguese; English subtitles.
Thursday, May 8
4:00
La Jaula de oro (The Golden Dream)
2013. Mexico/Spain 102 min.
Directed by Diego Quemada-Diez
Screenplay by Quemada-Diez, Lucia Carreras, Gibrán Portela
With Brandon López, Rodolfo Domínguez, Karen Martínez
One of the most promising debut features in years and winner of the Un Certain Regard award at last year’s Cannes Film Festival, The Golden Dream is an assured and impressive addition to a time-honored cinematic tradition of tracing the arduous journey from Central America to “el norte.” Drawn from hundreds of real-life interviews the director conducted with past immigrants, the film balances a vital and unflinching urgency with moments of tranquil lyricism.
7:00
El Mudo (The Mute)
Friday, May 9
4:00
La Demora (The Delay)
2012. Uruguay/Mexico 84 min.
Directed by Rodrigo Plá
Screenplay by Laura Santullo
With Roxana Blanco, Néstor Guzzini, Carlos Vallarino
Forced to care for her increasingly dependent father and three children between shifts at the local textile factory, María feels the world closing in. Unable to afford professional care or secure help, she makes a rash and desperate decision as a means of escape. With an impeccable sense of detail in every shot—whether emphasizing wide-angle symmetry or tight, claustrophobic framing—The Delay is a testament to cinematic restraint and efficiency, eschewing fanfare for a lean and assured austerity. 35mm print.
7:00
No. 2012. Chile/Mexico. Directed by Pablo Larraín. Screenplay by Pedro Peirano, based on the play by Antonio Skármeta. With Gael García Bernal, Alfredo Castro, Antonia Zegers.
Saturday, May 10
4:00
Yvy Maraey: Tierra sin mal (Yvy Maraey: Land without Evil).
7:30
La Sirga (The Towrope)
2012. Colombia/Mexico 88 min.
Written and directed by William Vega
With Floralba Achicanoy, Joghis Seudin Arias.
As the distraught Alicia arrives at her uncle’s cabin in the Colombian Andes, having escaped a war that left her home village decimated, she attempts to rebuild her life while grappling with lingering fears. With emphasis on sound and visual poetics over dialogue—recalling the hazy, languid worlds of 1970s Andrei Tarkovsky—Vega evocatively details the anxiety of negotiating an unfamiliar environment, even one where beautiful scenery still hints at a hidden menace.
Sunday, May 11
2:00
Melaza (Molasses)
2012. Cuba/Panama 80 min.
Written and directed by Carlos Lechuga
With Yuliet Cruz, Armando Miguel Gómez, Luis Antonio Gotti
With the closure of their town’s sugar mill, a young couple, Aldo and Monica, are pushed to the point of desperation as they struggle to preserve their personal passions and principles. While these are potentially the makings of an overwrought drama, director Carlos Lechuga deftly defies the film’s title and delivers a work this is neither sickly sweet nor exceedingly dark. With acutely drawn characters, a subtle wit, and an understated style that never sacrifices humanism for the cerebral, Molasses heralds the arrival of a distinct new voice in world cinema.
5:00
A Memória que me contam (Memories They Told Me). 2013. Brazil/Chile. Directed by Lúcia Murat. Screenplay by Murat, Tatiana Salem Levy. With Franco Nero, Irene Ravache, Simone Spoladore. In Portuguese; English subtitles. 95 min.
Monday, May 12
4:00
La Sirga (The Towrope) 2012. Colombia/Mexico. Written and directed by William Vega. With Floralba Achicanoy, Joghis Seudin Arias. 88 min.
7:00
La Jaula de oro (The Golden Dream) 2013. Mexico/Spain. Directed by Diego Quemada-Diez. Screenplay by Quemada-Diez, Lucia Carreras, Gibrán Portela. With Brandon López, Rodolfo Domínguez, Karen Martínez. 102 min.
Wednesday, May 14
4:00
Melaza (Molasses)
2012. Cuba/Panama. Written and directed by Carlos Lechuga. With Yuliet Cruz, Armando Miguel Gómez, Luis Antonio Gotti. 80 min.
7:00
La Demora (The Delay)
2012. Uruguay/Mexico. Directed by Rodrigo Plá. Screenplay by Laura Santullo. With Roxana Blanco, Néstor Guzzini, Carlos Vallarino. 35mm. 84 min.
Iberoamérican Images: The State of the Art
May 1–14, 2014
The Museum of Modern Art