From El Violin (2006)

Spring 2008

 

Cocalero
Directed by Alejandro Landes (Bolivia, 2006)

This film, nominated for the 2007 Sundance Grand Jury Prize, follows head of the coca-growers union, Evo Morales, as he campaigns for the Bolivian presidency. The director gets up close and personal with the unlikely candidate, following him from formal fundraising dinners to mass rallies to casual gatherings with friends. 94 minutes. Quechua and Spanish with English subtitles.  

"In the midst of this consultant-polished election season, Alejandro Landes’s inside look at Evo Morales’s successful 2005 run for the Bolivian presidency is both refreshing and just plain fun." — The Village Voice

Wednesday, February 13, 7:00 pm
160 Kroeber Hall


Heading South
by Laurent Cantet (Haiti, 2006)

In the late 1970s, three middle-aged, middle-class Western women vacation in a Haitian resort where handsome young locals cater to their every need. Two of the women are soon caught up in a rivalry over Legba, the most desirable man on the beach. Consumed by the politics of their own sexual escape, the women choose to remain ignorant about the economic and political situation that pushes young men like Legba into their arms. 108 minutes. Creole, French and English with English subtitles.

"'Heading South' is a seemingly straightforward and simple picture that’s really defiantly complex, sexually, politically and emotionally." — Salon.com

Wednesday, March 12, 7:00 pm
160 Kroeber Hall


El Violin
by Francisco Vargas (Mexico, 2006)

"El Violin" tells the story of a family of traveling musicians living a dangerous double life in rural 1970s Mexico, gathering weapons for a revolt as they move from town to town. They return home to find that the army has occupied their village, and their neighbors have fled to the hills. Using his seeming helplessness as a disguise, the elderly Don Plutarco — played by Don Angel Tavira, who won the Best Actor prize at Cannes for his portrayal — takes his violin down to the army camp in an attempt to retrieve munitions buried in a village cornfield. 98 minutes. Spanish with English subtitles.

“Pure and emotive cinema that shakes you with its honesty.” — Guillermo del Toro

Monday, April 7, 7:00 pm
Pacific Film Archive Theater


CLAS Film Series

Cine Contemporáneo


Spring 2005

Cinema Brasil


Fall 2004

Cine Documental


Spring 2004

Cine Chile

Fall 2002

 

 
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