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Cine Documental explores contemporary documentary
film from Latin America. These documentary films lend a unique view
and understanding of several Latin American issues and regions. Films
are presented in a seminar format that includes presentations, viewing
and discussion following the event. |

(from City
of God, © Miramax) |
The
Other Francisco
Director: Sergio Giral (1974)
This
critical adaptation of the nineteenth-century Cuban novel Francisco by
Anselmo Suárez Romero deconstructs the novel to expose
its racist assumptions. Giral retells the story to reveal
the nature of slavery and class struggle in Cuba. 100 minutes.
Spanish with English subtitles.
Wednesday,
February 11, 7:00 pm
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
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City
of God
Director: Fernando Meirelles (2002)
Built
in the 1960s, the housing project Cidade de Deus soon becomes
one of the most dangerous slums in Rio de Janeiro. The film
shows us the world of the favela through the lens of Rocket,
a young photographer who tries to walk the line between witnessing
and falling victim to the violent lives of his childhood
friends. Divided into three distinct sections, the film portrays
their childhood in the 60s, the rise of Lil’ Ze as
neighborhood kingpin in the 70s and the escalation of violence
into an all-out war between rival gangs in the 80s. Shot
in a dramatic and nonlinear style, the movie immerses the
viewer in a claustrophobic, violent world of poverty, desperation
and child-gangsters. 135 minutes.
Portuguese with English subtitles.
City
of God is based on the novel by Paulo Lins, who will be a
visiting scholar at the Center for Latin American Studies
in spring 2004. Mr. Lins will be at the screening to give
an introduction and answer questions about the film.
Wednesday,
March 3, 7:00 pm
Room 160, Kroeber Hall
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The
Promised Ship
Director: Luciano Capelli (2000) and
Jump
Over the Atlantic
Director: María Eugenia Esparragoza (1990)
The
Promised Ship
In the 1920s, Marcus Garvey, the leader of the early 20th century black
power movement, founded a steamship line intended to transport black
people back across the Atlantic to their ancestral homelands. In this
documentary, the old townspeople of Limón, on the Caribbean coast
of Costa Rica, recall the emotional impact this venture had on them and
their parents, although it never came to fruition. The film also documents
the United Fruit Company’s efforts to squelch Garvey’s organizing
activities on the region’s banana plantations. 51 minutes.
English
and Spanish with subtitles.
Jump
Over the Atlantic
This film traces cultural similarities and continuities
between a small Afro-Venezuelan settlement in Barlovento, on
the coast of Venezuela, and the Belgian Congo in Africa, where
people were captured and sold into slavery in the nineteenth
century. By showing each group film footage of their brothers
overseas, the film captures the opinions Venezuelans and Congolese
have of one another. This cross-cultural ethnographic exercise
shows that, long after their migration from Africa, Afro-Venezuelans
retain many African practices. 30 minutes.
Spanish and French with English subtitles.
Wednesday,
March 31, 7:00 pm
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
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The
Forgotten Roots
Director: Rafael Rebollar (2001) and
Candombe
Director: Mabel Maio (1999)
The
Forgotten Roots
This impressive documentary details the history of Mexico’s
often-overlooked African populations. Drawing on interviews
and archival imagery, the film takes us from the slavery of
the colonial era to today’s Afro-Mexican communities
in Guerrero, Oaxaca, Campeche, Morelos and Veracruz. The Forgotten
Roots argues that Mexico’s famous mestizaje includes
the important contributions of African groups, as well as Spaniards
and Indians. 50 minutes.
Spanish with English subtitles.
Candombe
This film gives a broad introduction to the history of
Candombe and documents its pervasive influence in the Río
de la Plata region of Uruguay. Touching on the region’s
history of slavery and the historical development of Candombe
from a marginal form to a widely accepted and appreciated musical
genre, it includes interviews with Candombe pioneers Lágrima
Ríos and Martha Gularte, as well as other historians,
musicians and experts. 48 minutes.
Spanish with English subtitles.
Wednesday,
April 21, 7:00 pm
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
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