From Favela Rising (2005)

Favela Rising, by Jeff Zimbalist (2005)

Set in one of Rio de Janeiro’s most violent slums, a former drug trafficker uses hip-hop, street rhythms and Afro-Brazilian dance to transform his community. 80 minutes. Portuguese with English subtitles.

- Movie website: trailers and plot synopsis

Monday, September 11, 7:00 pm
Pacific Film Archive, 2575 Bancroft Way
(map)


The Devil's Miner, by Kief Davidson and Richard Ladkani (2005)

This documentary follows the story of 14 year-old Basilio Vargas and his 12 year-old brother Bernardino. Working in the depths of the Bolivian silver mines of Cerro Rico, they and the other miners believe their fate is determined by the devil. While supporting their mother, the brothers work to placate the devil and to escape a life in the mines through education. 82 minutes. Spanish with English subtitles.

Wednesday, October 4, 7:00 pm
Room 160, Kroeber Hall
(map)


Voces Inocentes, by Luis Mandoki (2005)

Chava, an eleven-year-old boy, suddenly becomes the "man of the house" after his father abandons the family in the middle of the El Salvadoran civil war. As he helps his mother pay the bills and experiences the pangs of first love, Chava knows that soon he may be either drafted by the army or forced to join the rebels to avoid being conscripted with his classmates. 118 minutes. Spanish with English subtitles.

Wednesday, October 18, 7:00 pm
Room 160, Kroeber Hall (map)


De Nadie, by Tin Dirdamal (2005) In De Nadie, Mexican filmmaker Tin Dirdamal follows Central American refugees in a South-Mexican refugee centre, from where they hitch illegal rides on freight trains to the northern border. Apart from the Mexican immigration service and police, the illegal aliens are threatened by the security service of the railroad companies, the criminal La Mara Salvatrucha gang and the train itself. The horror stories of refugees, are alternated with interviews with employees of the railroad, the immigration service and a relief organization, and complemented by background information. 84 minutes, Spanish with English subtitles. Wednesday, November 8, 7:00 pm
Room 160, Kroeber Hall

(map)


Pancho Villa: The Revolution Has Not Ended
A documentary by Francesco Taboada
In 1999, Don Ernesto Nava celebrated his 85th birthday with his family and revealed to them a secret that he had kept all of his life. He recalled how, on his 8th birthday, his mother had told him: “Look you are the son of Gen. Francisco Villa, but you may never tell any one.” Eighty-two years after having crossed the Rio Bravo, Nava returns to Mexico to discover who his father was. In Spanish with English subtitles, 102 minutes. Part of the 10th International Latino Film Festival.

Tuesday, November 14, 7:00 pm
Room 159, Mulford Hall

CLAS Film Series

Cine Contemporáneo


Spring 2005

Cinema Brasil


Fall 2004

Cine Documental


Spring 2004

Cine Chile

Fall 2002

 

 
© 2005, The Regents of the University of California, Last Updated - April 4, 2007