Your NY Latino International Film Festival schedule

I’m sad to miss out on all the sexy, steamy fun that will be popping at the 13th New York International Latino Film Festival this week, starting with tonight’s official Opening Night screening of Filly Brown starring Miss Thang Gina Rodriguez.    However I’ve been invited to be on the shorts jury for the Monterrey Film Festival so I leave for Mexico mañana (look forward to my dispatch from el otro lado).  To all my NY Dominicanos, Cubanos, Boriquas and Chicanitas les mando mushos besos.  But not to worry, I wouldn’t leave you hanging without a quickie.   Let me give you the scoop on how to proceed amid NYILFF’s multi-culti flavorful spread of this year’s freshest new films.  I don’t include typical loglines as much as words that pop into my head to describe the visceral experience.  Click on the titles for synopsis and ticket info.

And now, here is my  top five CAN-NOT-MISS list at this year’s New York International Latino Film Festival.  Your welcome.

1.  The Girl is in Trouble, w/d –  Julius Onah (World Premiere)  A pulsating at times frenetic, breathless city adventure a la french new wave thriller  with a thugged out Valderrama who actually displays chops with an angelic and barbaric side to his swaggering performance.  This film is an explosive burst of energy, even when the pace takes a breather its story speed keeps trucking and keeps it cinematic by utilizing all the canons of visual play into a story that you get swept up in.  I couldn’t find a trailer online so just trust.  It’s fresh.

2. Love, Concord, w/d – Gustavo Guardado (World Premiere).  I profiled this charming high school rom com earlier this Spring so I’m especially excited that this baby is being delivered to the NYILFF audiences.   It succeeds where so many other films of this genre fail and that is portraying the MOMENT back in high school, and unbelievably its so goddamn charming and cute without the heavy and sweet empty calories.

3.  Los Chidos, w/d Omar Rodriguez Lopez.  The most  wildest, fierce and singular voice out there right now.  I love talking about this highly provocative and polarizing movie and all its unbridled uncouthness that underlines such themes like the male psyche/ego, exploitation, religion, stereotypes all under the guise of a TJ trip gone wrong.  This savage satire from my boy Omar has terrified some people since its premiere at SXSW.  I can’t wait to screen it in LA at the Downtown Independent.

4.  Waiting for the Beatles -Diego Graue, Raymundo Marmolejo.  I’m sorry to say bu the trailer below does not do the documentary justice.  Its even a much more  jubilant and uncanny tribute to hundreds of Beatle cover bands and Beatlemania in Mexico.  This one’s for bringing the whole fan.  Ever since it premiered at my favorite fest, The Morelia Film Festival last October I’ve had a special place in my heart for it.  I love the intro,  “In 1969 Mexico waited for the Beatles to come.  Nearly 30 years later they are still waiting”.

5. Elliot Loves, w/d – Gary Terracino  Yes, I know this bad boy has been getting around.  But its been getting down in the festival circuit for a reason y’all.  This simultaneous childhood and adult coming of ager of the eponymous incorrigible, hopeless in love but tough as nails Dominican in NY is utterly romantic and down and dirty real.  Never in my life have I seen gay cholos portrayed so candidly, raw and honest.  Never.  Breaking archetypes and flipping the script.

Other tips.  Something says Sold Out?  Try Stand-by line, I bet you get in.  None of these features grab you? You can never go wrong with a shorts program.  Lastly, if you got a steady job, invest in a festival badge and support the Festival.  $200 gets you access to any movie and the lounge and its the cheapest inclusive pass I’ve seen on the Festival block.

LALIFF – The Drive

My old 2005 LALIFF Volunteer shirt. The image (corazon) and word, Drive, epitomizes the festival’s beating spirit and describes the Fundraising and Support Drive needed now to keep it beating stronger than ever!

People always ask me how I got my start in film festival programming and the answer is volunteering at the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival.  Back in 2006, I was a miserable, zombie-eyed assistant to a Hollywood studio producer the likes of the tyrannical boss in Devil Wears Prada.  When LALIFF took place I always looked forward to volunteering whenever I could because that is where I woke up to the multi-cultural flavor, intensity and originality of International Latin American Cinema and became part of the spectrum of saucy Spanish language-accented conversation.   I discovered a whole community of young, brown and beautiful Latinos hustling their craft.  So I decided to take a leap of faith by pursuing and accepting a short term position as Programming Assistant at the Festival.   I willingly accepted the lowly wages, and for the first time entered into the highly stressful and unstable world of the non-profit festival seasonal world, where I still reside.   Unlike the white-bread, diluted projects I had written script coverage on over at the studio.  I was thrilled to work in a film realm that offered true cultural exchange and offered unique points of view.  Back then LALIFF was at its peak as a 14 day filled fiesta of films and events and over 100 features (cut to last year’s 42 features).  It was such a memorable sight to see audiences line up past the Egyptian Theatre’s deep courtyard all the way down to the Hollywood Walk of Fame for films like the Colombian blockbuster movie, Soñar No Cuesta Nada, Mexican documentaries like En El Hoyo from established documentary master, Juan Carlos Rulfo, or the emo goth punks who came out for the high octane documentary on Alex Lora frontman for legendary Mexican rock band, El Tri.   Screenings were packed and the celebration was epic. I continued to attend the festival in the years following, up until last year’s Quinceañera edition when I was surprised to see someone other than the Festival’s Executive Director, Marlene Dermer introduce films.  It was none other than Edward James Olmos himself, aggressively pleading the audience to become a member of the Latino International Film Institute for the sake of sustaining LALIFF. It was a cry for help that seems to have gone unanswered.

Earlier this month, Edward James Olmos announced that LALIFF which had previously announced its dates for a five day fest from August 16-21, would not be returning for its 2012 edition.  The announcement which had an almost pre-emptive positive sounding spin and deliberately left out any reason behind canceling simply stated “…the next edition of the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival (LALIFF) will be in the summer 2013, marking a new era for the organization and the Los Angeles Film Institute (LIFI), the non-profit organization that produces the annual festival.  LALIFF will present landmark anniversary screenings and will host membership/networking events.”

In the previous weeks, filmmakers had submitted their precious films and with them the hopes of screening at a festival which may have been their only outlet.  A number of films had already been invited and even confirmed.  Mere days before their start date, longtime seasonal staff had been notified their job fell through.   No doubt such a sudden decision was an extremely painful and difficult to make, of the last resort variety.   The abrupt news that the preeminent Latino film festival in the mecca of Hollywood was not happening sent many of us in the latino community reeling.  First I was saddened, then alarmed.  Other than the LA Times piece titled Fundraising Shortfall causes LA Latino Film Festival Cancellation, I was dissatisfied with minimal coverage in the following days given such a landmark festival was in trouble.  I began to reach out to filmmakers, industry, staff and other film festival directors to get reactions and figure out how to rally support.  As the story organically shaped into a tribute piece, for me it also naturally stemmed questions like,  ‘Why has such an important festival contracted instead of expanded over the years?’,  ‘Besides making a donation, how can we come together and become the life support it needs right now?’  “Are the challenges it faces insurmountable or can we rebuild our reputation?  “How do we make a Latino Film Festival commercially viable?”  I know, clearly too much to cover in one post but all ideas worth touching on that I hope I can engage you to comment and kickstart dialogue.

Erase una Vez

So the story goes as I’ve been told by old school vets, in 1996 the city of Los Angeles’ cultural commission approached a few high profile and influential Latino Hollywood players like Moctezuma Esparza, (Maya Releasing producer/ exhibitor) and Jerry Velasco (President of Nosotros, the oldest Latino Media advocacy group, and owner of the Ricardo Montalban theatre in Hollywood ), to meet the demand of the Latino population and create a Latino Film Festival. It was Edward James Olmos, who was becoming more and more popular due to his starring roles in such bi-cultural cross over pioneer hits like American Me, Mi Familia, and Selena, who stepped up to lead the charge.  Together with Marlene Dermer, who at the time was at Paramount, the two founded LALIFF which in its 15 years of existence has become THE most invaluable and critical platform for Latin American and American Latino talent.  As Marlene Dermer puts it, ” LALIFF has nurtured and supported the work of Latino actors, writers, producers, and directors who have gone to become internationally recognized, to work with Hollywood studio films, and have become award-winning filmmakers.  Since 1998, the Festival has had over 25,000 LAUSD students participate in their powerful Youth program in which kids are bussed to the Festival to walk the red carpet, be dazzled and inspired by established artists who they can identify with and share their same language.  It became an institute, LIFI, in 2005 and one of its goals through the Youth Program is to support younger generations to find a voice in film, to see film as a possibility after graduating from school, and most important promote literacy in our community.”

Alumni Cineastas

A festival serves a number of different constituents who are all equally integrated and important, from nurturing audiences, providing acquisition opportunities and talent for industry, and of course the filmmakers who provide the content.  Many thanks to the filmmakers who shared with me their experiences and thoughts.

Josefina Lopez (Real Women Have Curves) who has served as a juror at the Festival took the time to send me an email in the middle of shooting her new movie on location to say “I was very sad to hear about the festival not happening this year… It was always a dream of mine to submit a film and have it be the opening night film. I really hope this is only temporary but I have been aware of the tremendous struggle it has been to keep the festival going each year.  I really hope it continues soon so when my feature is ready I can make one of my dreams come true and have it screen at LALIFF.”  When not making her own films Lopez has established herself as a mentor to many young artists and revitalized a space in East LA, Casa 101 that puts on live theater and she is also the founder of The Boyle Heights Latina Film Festival.

Best festival parties EVER. We all went to them, so lets support them so we can have MAS to come!

Multi-hypenate (actor/director/producer), Douglass Spain (Star Maps, Resurrection Blvd) actor/producer/director has had several films premiere at LALIFF including a short he directed, ONLINE. “That year”, he says, “I spent everyday at LALIFF and got to know so many talented people which led to fruitful collaborations.  I’m Latino and I’ll own up to that.  LALIFF owned up to it as well.  They created a platform that gave Hollywood an opportunity to see how diverse we Latinos are; How rich our stories are and how financially successful they can be.  I guess it wasn’t enough.  Funding and support… that’s the real reason this festival isn’t coming back in 2012.    When Edward James Olmos asked me become a member and pay the fee, I did it without hesitation.  LALIFF 2012 is where we had hoped to premiere our  new film Mission Park.  To end on a high note, LALIFF had the best freaking parties in town, period.  It’s true about us Latinos, we love to have fun especially on set.  Whenever we get a chance to celebrate, we are there.  LALIFF was a place that brought all of us LA Latino Filmmakers and from the world over together to celebrate great cinema, music, dance and life.   I don’t think it’s the end for LALIFF.  I’m hoping it won’t be.  In September 2012 a new film festival will emerge in Chicago… Mexican Film Festival of the Americas.  Mission Park has been invited to premiere there.  This goes to show that when one door closes another one opens.

Meanwhile, Alfredo de Villa (Washington Heights) who has had five features and premiered his very first short film at LALIFF reminded me of the vital role of film festivals in general –   “Festivals can provide a cultural antidote without alienating its own base….they expose audiences to something different and contribute to a different strain of thinking.”  In talking about the overall fragmentation of the Latino population fragmentation he points to the 29% of Latinos living at or below poverty level who are in effect, ‘stranded by the experience as we know it’.”  The Mexican American experience of which roots in the US goes backs centuries is vastly different than the Central American wave of the 80s. And so on and so forth. ” We are still defining who we are so how can we become a political force?   That is what is missing, the community is all over the place and as filmmakers we’ve been catching up rather then responding or identifying it before it happens.”

Gabriela Tagliavini whose second film, romantic comedy, Ladies Night opened the 2004 Festival, premiered her opera prima,  “The Woman Every Man Wants” at LALIFF in 2001.  Last year she showed her film, Without Men, which turned out the stars like Eva Longoria and La reina, Kate del Castillo on the red carpet.  Gabriela says, “I would have never gotten so much press and exposure if it wasn’t for them (LALIFF), and I live in LA!  People that come from all over Latin America with their indie movies in Spanish would never see the day of light.  Plus, there’s the networking. Everybody mingles at the courtyard of the Egyptian, meet, compares notes and laugh.They had these lunches at the top studios to introduce the Latino filmmakers. I got to meet the CEO of Warner Brothers, Nina Jacobson when she was at Disney and Mark Gil when he was at Miramax. This is an opportunity that no other film festival does for their community. It’s too bad that my new film “The Mule” staring Sharon Stone which is about Immigration in the Mexican-US border won’t be able to be shown at LALIFF this year. I wonder what’s going to happen to all those other fantastic films that we might never get to see.”

There are many other filmmakers I did not have a chance to connect with who I’m sure would echo the sentiments of the networking and industry opportunities LALIFF has given them on top of the  audience reach it provides.

Industria and Networking

Over the years, the industry component and exposure to studios that LALIFF use to facilitate seems to have diminished.  It used to serve as a mini-market of sorts with its industry office library of Latin American films which offered studio execs the opportunity to come in and pore over hundreds of titles to consider for acquisition.  On the other hand the invaluable hub of networking with one’s peers remains the Festival’s biggest strength and community builder  .  The collaboration that grows out of those dancing parties has brought countless artists together.  Eddie Ruiz, who produced the short film, Mad Doggin was at the Festival last year remarked that while it wasn’t incredibly industry-centric in the way a filmmaker might seek a job for hire, the incredible social aspect of meeting like minded talent re-invigorated him, the audiences gave him a sense of affirmation, and in general he appreciated the environment that encourages the mantra of persistence of vision. and no matter how hard it is, to keep making your films.

Ben Odell,  who most recently produced  Girl in Progress, and is shooting Aztec Warrior with Luis Guzman, said, ” It’s tragic the thought of losing LALIFF”.  Odell tells me that over the years he has met a number of talented directors that he would have never met if not for LALIFF, and many of whom he’s collaborated with like Sebastian Borensztein with whom he wrote and produced the 2010 Mexican thriller, Sin Memoria.  He adds, “It’s particularly important to have the Latino festival in LA because it blends mainstream Hollywood, the US Distribution part with talent.” In talking about the big drum that is “Latino” he hinted at the programming challenge of lumping the everything in one category that defies sub-culture, in this case genre and audiences. “How do you fit in Latino art house movies from Peru and Chicano shoot ’em up movies all under Latino.  It’s not the same audience”.  I asked him what kind of festival would be most viable as far as getting our Latino talent industry exposure, to which he quickly asserted and used many examples of recent commercial genre films.  It’s true, there is an influential big wave of filmmakers from Colombia, Cuba, Central America who grew up with Hollywood blockbusters and now want to make those in their own flavor.  It reminds me of Alejandro Brugues the director of Juan of the Dead.  One last observation worth mentioning is filmmakers not wanting to pigeonhole themselves as a “Latino filmmaker’.   Might this play into the shaky support of some LALIFF filmmaker alumni?

Jerry Velasco, recently awarded NALIP’s Lifetime Achievement Award in Media Advocacy, says that upon hearing the news he immediately reached out to the organizers to say, ‘How can I help? Whatever you need I’m here.”  If we let them go we’ll have to wait another four to five years to start another”, the implication that it takes a long time to establish a brand.  “Lets help and continue and compliment.  We gotta make it work in LA.”    “It’s alarming,” he goes on to say, ” I’m worried about it losing momentum.  Corporate America should be more conscious.  We should support by contributing our contacts, dollars, get together and not let it die out.  Let’s create a chain reaction….Think of all of those who LALIFF has touched.  It’s alright to say, hey listen the film festal is in trouble.  It has brought a lot of joy over the years”.  What about some of Hollywood’s leading Latino talent?  To them,  Jerry challenges them to lend their money and vocal support.  We are talking about la J-Lo, Salma Hayek, Eva Longoria etc.

 Santa (Saint) Sacrifices made by staff and volunteers

Former staff were kind enough to share their years in the trenches, sometimes off the record,  and more than one implied, “I’ve been taught that if you don’t have nothing nice to say, don’t say anything at all (I do not subscribe to that – if it is to motivate change, bring it).   I asked the passionate, tireless and multi-tasker producer extraordinaire, Monica Sandoval who’s worked for LALIFF the past six years to share.   “LALIFF stands for so many things. It has brought together so many people, so much creativity and so many opportunities. In a city such as L.A., LALIFF has been our flag. I discovered LALIFF as I hit the pavement hard, at full speed, although as a volunteer my first year, I had responsibilities’ like a staff member. I quickly realized this was greatly due to the fact that LALIFF was understaffed. As staff member the following year, I had become part of a hardcore family that spent hours without sleep, inventing innovative ways of using the few resources we had to make the festival as inviting and as extraordinary as possible.  There is a lot of hard work and miracles, that go into carrying out this Festival. Then of course, there is LALIFF’s grim reality in regards to it’s core structure. There isn’t a year round team following up and maintaining LALIFF despite the many years its been around. I don’t fully understand why there isn’t a sponsorship coordinator working year-round. There are so many things that can be done throughout the year to maintain LALIFF alive. (on Marlene Dermer) …”I cannot imagine anyone else more passionate, more deserving, more appropriate for carrying out LALIFF than Marlene. BUT because of this, she hasn’t or maybe can’t let anyone else restructure, assist, give input, because this is too personal for her. LALIFF has been her lifelong mission and I truly believe LALIFF would not exist without her.  LALIFF is in dire need of restructuring… I believe full heartedly that it was the best thing to do considering the circumstances and that this will ignite a shift in LALIFF’s history. There can only be new and exciting changes in its future. Hopefully people will realize how important LALIFF is and by missing it this year, will be prompted to actively support LALIFF and not just show up to ask to get into free screenings or parties…

Gabriel Sotomayor, a filmmaker and now Director of Programming at the University of Guadalajara use to work closely with Marlene was the only one on staff year round for a couple years.  He argued vehemently that we, the community must put in to as much of what we’ve gotten out of LALIFF.

We are all in it together

On top of the love and passion fueled by alumni and staff there is also much goodwill and support from the community of non-profit art organizations at large:

John Cooper, Director of the Sundance Film Festival, which this year premiered two US Latino features, Mosquita y Mari and Filly Brown said, “There is a real value in showing films that represent a broad range of stories and cultures, as well as developing audiences for these films. Coming together as a community with like-minded passion is important and inspiring. We recognize that we are currently in a challenging fundraising climate, and with limited or no support from government agencies, it can be difficult for nonprofit arts organizations to thrive. We send our best wishes to the Latino International Film Institute and hope to see continued programming from the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival very soon.”

The Egyptian Theatre, home of the American Cinematheque which has served as the dazzling venue for LALIFF nearly every year, also expressed their support.  Nancy Winters, director of Special Events  said, “LALIFF has been an extraordinary organization to work with and we’ve been very proud to serve as a partner.  We are saddened to see the organization struggle however its not unusual to see organizations.”  In addition to its cinephile driven film programming, the American Cinematheque works with about 12 film festivals a year and in her 22 years there, Nancy has seen a number of festivals pop up and fade out.  Other Latino oriented programming there includes their home grown Spanish Cinema series and The Hollywood Brazillian Film Festival (which Talize Sayegh former LALIFFer who founded four years ago – big mad props querida!)

Eddie at last year’s Festival tried to drum up support at screenings

While calls and emails to Eddie Olmos went unanswered, Marlene Dermer took the time to email me back.  “We want people to know that we are regrouping and we are just taking a break from producing the festival this year, and we will return in 2013.  We will continue to support Latino filmmakers with special screenings and other events. We will be announcing them on the website, to our members, and to the press when they are scheduled.Our mission is to support Latino films and filmmakers and serve our community, and that will never change even if we don’t celebrate a festival this year.  We are positive about our organization, and believe that after 15 years, our community knows that LALIFF has offered audiences the best venue in the city to celebrate Latino films and artistry and in the process we created a cultural event for our community.   Many don’t realize that LALIFF, which started in 1997, has expanded to work year-round with Youth Programs, screenings, and Preservation Film programs, among other things.   All of these programs need funding, is not about the festival alone.  Fundraising has become a challenge for all non-profit organizations regardless of serving Latino or non-Latino communities.   We are a non-profit organization, and every contribution, regardless of the amount, helps us continue our mission. People can support us, by becoming a member.

Membership and Sponsorship support

Speaking of Membership.  Okay, full disclosure,  Up until a few clicks ago I was not a member of the Latino International Film Institute.  (You can make a donation here, the festival’s actual membership donation page is wonky).  You heard right, here I am, talking the talk, wanting to support the festival and I wasn’t even a member.  See the pattern?  I don’t doubt that there’s more than a few of you out there like me out there so let’s get it together people.  This thing is bigger than us. Membership is from $50 – $500. Cultivating membership and making it worthwhile for folks is critical especially given the demographic the festival appeals to the most, LA’s hip, young starving artists. In talking with Calixto Chinchilla, founder of the West Coast’s big Latino fest, NY Latino Film Festival  (which announces programming this week!!) I ask him, ‘Shouldn’t it be easier in this climate to get the support of corporate sponsorship since everyone is itching to tap the Latino market?,  to which he immediately says, “It’s hard as hell.  The cost of a festival isn’t getting any cheaper.    Managing how to spend a decreased budget and sponsorships is more critical than ever and takes lots of savvy.  Everyone is downsizing and competition for sponsorship is getting fierce.  “It’s like Survivor of the Fittest!”.  Activation, deliverables and reports must be stringently met.  The NY Latino Film festival which from its inception has benefited from a strong sponsor relationship with HBO is no exception and has also had to scale down some.  Calixto added,  “I was sad to find out a big city like LA is in trouble”.  He pointed out to San Diego Latino Film Festival, a festival he frequents regularly, which has managed to thrive and applauds Founder and Executive Director, Ethan Van Thillo and Artistic Director, Lisa Franek.  “It takes a while to build a brand”.  Calixto offered up the idea of putting together a summit for all Latino Film Festivals.  “We should be open to having a dialogue, put aside our egos so we can find a way to have each other’s back.  We hall have our best interests in mind and want to see us succeed.”  I think its a good time to reflect and think about the future.”  I agree wholeheartedly with Calixto. Just like he suggested at NALIP that a junior advisory board would rejuvenate and tap into the pulse of the fresh and younger and younger skewing energy pulse, it’s something to consider for LALIFF too.  There’s a whole lot we can learn from the Old Guard and just as much they can learn from us.   Why not form a mutually beneficial mix of old and new and spice it up some?

Back to Sponsorship  – the other person who flipped the script on my naive thinking (isn’t it easier to get money for Latinos?)  was the erudite Moctezuma Esparza.  I realized I was asking wrong questions given my lack of historical plays out.  Esparza says, ” Sponsorship has changed.  Corporate demand is for measurable results.  There was a time when sponsors and advertisers were all about impressions; how many people see xyz.  The landscape is now changing, sponsorship is tied to Marketing which is tied to Programing.  They are looking for direct results, increased sales.  That presents a tremendous challenge for a cultural venue.  Competition is intense.   As a consequence there is a retrenchment in dollars to all kind of organizations.  The criteria for allocation is changing.”  At yet another point where I, the young kid, was quick to interject because I thought he was going to give one of those crossover success stories from 20 years that’s no longer relevant, he said, ” Twenty five  years ago movies like, Born in East LA , Stand and Deliver, Milagro Beanfieled War, La Bamba, every two years these movies were being made, reaching a growing audience.  For their cost they turned profits.  But only about three filmmakers were making these films and there was not enough support from studios to create a habit for audience, a HABITAT.  Structural changes are the challenges.  It’s important to have an nuanaced understanding of the forces of nature instead to beating each other up.  It’s not useful to say that latinos are not supporting each other.

Esparza who as executive producer has had many films screen at the festival says, “LALIFF has been an invaluable cultural platform that grew every year and seemed to grow in reach and reputation.   LALIFF offers two powerful benefits; to filmmakers – access to a market and recognition, and second to audiences  – the opportunity and access to extraordinary films not distributed online or in the US home video.  “I look forward to LALIFF’s renewed commitment.”

Let’s be real

Let’s be real though.  As important and empowering it is to recognize the milestone achievements of LALIFF,  I believe there is value, now more than ever, for the community and especially those familiar with festivals who want to help (moi) to offer constructive feedback where there is room for improvement and to also offer our efforts, mobilize, and shake things up a bit.  Not everything can be chalked up to lack of resources, right?  What about consistency and leadership?  I remember what Calixto said.  A smaller budget requires skillful management and a constant shifting of priorities that continue to serve the mission.  Then there are other details like, year after year I notice LALIFF does not announce its program until right before the festival.  The publicity machinery needs time to massage interest in films most of the the public has never heard about.   Also, in Hollywood where there is a vibrant community of arts and multi-media festivals competing for audiences wide scale awareness is key.    Right now if you look on the Festival’s website, it still gives you the submission deadline. No indication of the announcement so one might not be able to tell that the Festival has been cancelled.   Sure these may sound like details and tiny oversights and I’m not saying that this never happens at other festivals.  But the difference here is the unchecked perpetual culmination of these oversights reflect a poor infrastructure.  And these are relatively easy fixes that should be priorities because they go a long way.  We could and should demand better from our Latino organizations.  After all we have to work twice as hard to get ahead.

An active year round presence  is required to make a festival grow.  Only a couple staff members are year round, if that.  That’s an enormously debilitating factor given the scale of the international festival.  Who or what do the Board of Directors do?  Are they doing all they can to power the festival?

Will the organization embrace and engage with the community on how to revamp the festival?  I hope so and will stay optimistic until I see otherwise.  Given the injection of new board member, the passionate Luisa Crespo, Executive Director of Academic Senate at UC Irvine, who has lent the festival renewed credibility and has committed to working with Marlene Dermer, I noticed a small but notable impact last year.  International Industry maven, Sydney Levine has been an advisory board member for many years.  Sought after by many festivals to lend her expertise on distribution and acquisitions, they are lucky to have Sydney’s participation as its immensely beneficial to emerging filmmakers at the festival.

Despite all of its trouble, one thing is clear to me; the audience continues to show up to LALIFF screenings- BECAUSE THERE ARE STILL FEW AND FAR IN BETWEEN VENUES THAT SHOW SPANISH LANGUAGE AND BI-LITERATE PROGRAMMING.   And that is why I am renewing my support and commitment to the cause.  If I am harsh at pointing out its flaws while applauding its achievements, its only because  I want it to be as perfect as possible. I believe LALIFF will only grow strong with a rehaul set by the community.

I implore everyone who has been enriched by the festival to give tribute to the festival’s legacy. Whether they openly admit it or not, LALIFF is in trouble and the call to action is bigger than all of us.  I encourage us to speak out and speak LOUD.  Let’s tell the organizers what we expect and want from our festival and then help make it happen.  While we won’t be seeing new work at the Festival, the organizers are planning a Retrospective program which they will be announcing soon on their website.  Follow LALIFF on twitter and like them on Facebook.  Share your network of talented peers, make a donation no matter how small, volunteer.  Come to the Membership event today, Wednesday, July 25 at L’Scorpion (my favorite Hollywood tequila joint). If you can’t go, make a donation for whatever amount you want.  If I can do it and I’m broke as a joke, so can you.

LA Film Fest – Mexican American singer songwriter Rodriguez – the spotlight finally catches up on an extraordinary voice and icon

Sixto Rodriguez with Ben Gibbard (Deathcab for Cutie)

In a historical performance last night at the LA Film Festival’s Grammy night, Voices for Change (see my video clip at the end of post), a jet-black haired, black hat clad older man in a bright green suit was helped onstage and delivered a breathtaking, albeit short set.  I stared in awe at his huge fingers powerfully and dexterously strumming the guitar and deeply connected to his significant lyrics, mesmerized by his voice (think a raw version of James Taylor). His weary and slight 69 year old body is no doubt the result of his back breaking working-class roots, construction labor his trade for decades save for a short moment in the late 60s and early 70s when he worked on his music only to have his commercial debut flop and step back into obscurity. This is Mexican-American singer/songwriter Sixto Diaz Rodriguez who is being rediscovered, or rather finally being discovered in the United States, thanks in part to the upcoming documentary Searching for Sugarman.  Here’s the trailer:

The film by Stockholm based Malik Bendjelloul opened the World Cinema Documentary Competition at Sundance and was picked up by Sony Pictures Classics.  The film shows us the lore that followed his so called disappearance which reached mythological legend (that he committed suicide among other theories).  This whole time he was living a hardscrabble life in Detroit.  (So if you dont want anyone to find you, go to Detroit).  Watching the film I was so inspired by Rodriguez’s quiet zen and humble aura.  The accepting manner with which he played the unfair cards life dealt him is as unbelievable as the fact that while he was toiling away he became a star on another continent. English his second language, the Detroit singer’s 1970 record, Cold Fact became a huge hit in South Africa where he is bigger than Jimi Hendrix. His lyrics are classic, anthemic and socially and politically prescient than ever, from “Establishment Blues” (The mayor hides the crime rate, council woman hesitates, public gets irate but forget the vote date) to “Sugarman” which when he performed, he prefaced by saying the lyrics (“colors to my dreams, silver ships”, and the literal “coke and sweet Mary Jane”reference is not based on drug experiences (yeah right). Instead he told the audience to “Stay smart, don’t start” and “Hugs, not drugs”. I highly encourage you to read his poems that form his body of work on the Sugarman website here. New original songs are included in the film which will be released in LA and NY July 27.    A very touching and incredible story about a first generation Mexican-American whose voice was suppressed for many years at a time when the last name Rodriguez was perhaps too ethnic for the mainstream I thank Malik for making the film and hope it reaches audiences beyond the east and west coast.  Hopefully his upcoming appearance on the Letterman show will help.  Here’s a short highlight clip of the evening.

Middle of Nowhere LA Film Festival gala screening – An inspiring and touching film with a quest to bloom

In the first public screening since Sundance premiered the film in US Dramatic Competition back in January, Middle of Nowhere was embraced by a beautiful black audience who filled the 800 seat LA Live Regal theater 1 at last night’s LA Film Festival.  The energy was full of love and celebration for the highly esteemed colleague and friend to many, Ms. Ava DuVernay.  The stunning Angela Bassett who introduced the screening said the film premiered under the radar at Sundance (it won Best Director Award – how under the radar is that?) before bringing up the poised and radiant DuVernay.

Some red carpet and Ava’s introduction

Somehow and regrettably I lost the footage of the Q&A on the flipcam so I’ll just mention what I remember.   Ava’s actors joined her on the stage including the gorgeous doe-eyed lead Emayatzy Corinealdi, and Elvis Mitchell began to ask them to share their creative and collaborative process on set.  I was struck to hear the artists talk about their craft and the characters they played in such a profound way which is a credit, they all agreed to Ava’s fine-tuned script.  They  highly trusted Ava (an actors director, always a good thing) and felt led by her security and confidence which she exudes on the daily.  No doubt yet another advantage she brings to her directing suit and working ethic.  Lorraine Toussaint was especially poignant and thanked Ava for walking the walk.   Middle of Nowhere is being released through her own distribution company, AFFRM with Participant Media.  Ava is not afraid but admittedly concerned with the uncracked test of whether black people are going to see this film and whether white people are going to see it.  The real challenge is if the public will come out and buy tickets to see the film.  After all, it is a small independent art film.  She asked the audience a question she’s been thinking about; what kind of black movie would white people see?  Precious?  Someone said Men In Black – totally missing and making the point at the same time.

Ava has made a deeply personal film about separation and love, offering a unique point of view from the female who ‘does time’ on the outside while her significant other is incarcerated.  The prison population being disproportionately black and brown it is a film that addresses the effects on such a personal level.  Ava has been able to engage the support of likeminded peers in her corner from having worked in the publicity and business side of the game.  While the road ahead has a pretty big challenge, she’s got the brights on to help her steer through the unprecedented waters of firsts (again, its got to be successful at the box office).

I’m happy to have been present for a really a magical moment.  It felt like the public recognized the gift Ava is giving us in her work as an artist and inspiration as a business woman, totally owning it on all fronts of the film business.  Her fierce desire to drive change and advocate for independent films of which she is the biggest fan is unbridled.  She charged the audience to share and make this all our journey in supporting not just her film, but coming together to prove there is an audience and a profitable market in making and selling ‘our’ stories’.  Because like Angela Bassett said the studios are already making money, they don’t need to do it, we need to and should.  Amen sister!

Middle of Nowhere will be released October 12.

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Shades of Brown – Black, Latino and US Latino Cinema panels at LA Film Fest

I took in a few panels over the weekend down here at LA Film Fest that I really appreciated for sparking some provocative dialogue I am eager to continue throughout the Festival. I found it especially interesting how different the US Latino and Black film communities are responding to their storytelling plight in talking about their respective representation in media. Meanwhile the lively Latino panel, which was perhaps the broadest in scope, was eloquent and skillfully led by LA Times’ Reed Johnson who brought a high level of articulation in his profesh moderating.  As panel junkies know, a good moderator is key to an engaging panel and essential to keep it on point.  Here are my takeaways on the three panels:

Elvis Mitchell, Shari Frilot, Ava DuVernay, Roya Rastegar and Bradford Young

Moderated by Film Independent’s LACMA film curator and go-to festival moderator, Elvis Mitchell, I was particularly impressed at the messaging clarity and solidarity of the black film community’s efforts and goals for equal representation.  The panelists were very tuned-in with monitoring their talent behind and in front of the camera, and in this case stressing the importance of  festival curators, which was identified as one of three instrumental factors to enable their films getting out there.

Shari Frilot, Senior Programmer, Sundance Film Festival:  There was much (due) love and props given to Frilot for her ardent and tireless championing of films of color at Sundance.  She pointed out how after Lee Daniel’s breakout hit, Precious which premiered at 2009 Sundance and went on to win a couple Academy Awards, the next couple years it was the black films that were the first to be sold off the mountain including the dazzling lesbian coming of age film, Pariah.  She questioned why this achievement was not picked up or lauded in the mainstream media.  Its indeed curious and perhaps a telling point on the cultural gatekeeper front – (shortage of black critics and journalists?)  Having witnessed Shari’s highly charged and articulate arguing for gloriously imperfect, fresh and raw films I respect how she truly changes the way the film programming conversation takes place by discussing films’ drive, potential and power. I aspire to “bring it” like she does in my own programming career.  Acknowledging the personal efforts she puts in to make the festival seem accessible to filmmakers of color who may not bother putting Sundance on their radar, the idea of doing a black college tour came up.

Ava DuVernay, filmmaker (Middle of Nowhere) and founder of AFFRM:  DuVernay’s emotion for the topic at hand along with her experience from her publicist days and current roles as filmmaker and distributor made her a stirring contributor to the conversation.   Ava thanked LA Film Festival Director Stephanie Allain for programming Middle of Nowhere as a gala screening which elevates her film with a high profile slot within the festival.  A packed house at Wednesday’s gala screening will be quite significant to the black filmmaking community given the massive 800 seat theater and checking the LA Film Fest website it’s at Rush which will make for an exciting milestone!  The winner of the Best Director Award at Sundance Film Festival shared her personal observations like being stunned to see empty seats at the black film screenings at Sundance which is unheard of in the notoriously hard-to-get tickets Festival.  She mentioned that while she is frequently featured on Shadow and Act, the African Diaspora blog on the Indiewire network, she has never been on Indiewire’s main page.  DuVernay expressed her desire to see more films that move and operate beyond ‘black bodies’.

There was mention of films touted as successful black films when they happen to be by non-black filmmakers.  I can’t help but think the room was thinking about Gimme the Loot written and directed by Adam Leon and Beasts of the Southern Wild written and directed by Benh Zeitlin.  Both films have been praised and celebrated for their poignant storytelling and vivid portrayal of their black protagonists’ lifestyles – and the filmmakers happen to be white Jewish New Yorkers.  And both films were quickly picked up for distribution at their respective festival premieres. I have to admit that if we are talking about presenting positive representation in films my belief is that individually, these two films offer a lot as far as image conversion for eschewing mis-representation by avoiding stereotypes about black folks.  There’s nobody smoking crack or perpetuating violent crime in Gimme the Loot, and in Beasts the poetic punch of self-sufficient little Hushpuppy in the die-hard persevering displaced fictional community  that alludes to the forgotten 9th Ward post-Katrina, shows a triumph of spirit against the government and society’s response efforts following the devastating natural catastrophe in the dominantly affected marginalized population.

Bradford Young, cinematographer (Middle of Nowhere, Pariah, Restless City): A Howard University alumus, the in-demand cinematographer more gently echoed Ava’s sentiment about the limited accessibility and representation of black filmmakers but I feel he gave a bit more benefit of the doubt to black films by non-black filmmakers by his eloquent word of choice to weigh the debate; “Intention”.  The way he talks about his own cinematic approach is greatly influenced by the intention of the story and point of view.  A NY Times article recently featured the cinematographer and made note of his full frame and close up shots in Middle of Nowhere.  Indeed the luscious and texture he brings to shooting skincolor sticks out in my mind having seen it at Sundance.  Bradford is one cool cat with lots of soul.  All panelists agreed and were especially thankful for his eyes.

Roya Rastegar, Ph.D, Festival Programmer:  Inventive cinematography, curation by more females and people of color and innovative distribution were three ways Rastegar outlined to help minority filmmakers distinguish their work and get seen by the public.    I would love to get my hands on her dissertation, History of Concsiousness (here’s a taste) in which she investigates the role of festivals in shaping marginalized culture.  Armed with such interesting facts on the history of film festivals, (did you know Stalin created the first film festival?) Rastegar added a lot of context to the origins and current state of film festivals.  She also shared the behind the scenes conversations of film programmers when talking about films of color and the rueful tendency to dismiss these films because they aren’t so called ‘good enough’.   She made no hesitation in pointing out that Tribeca Film Festival did not have one single black film in competition this year.

US Latino Cinema: Welcome to the Bi-Literate Future –  Presented by San Antonio Film Commission and AFCI (Association of Film Commissions International)

Luis Reyes, Moi, Doug Spain, Gabriela Tagliavini, Ralph Lopez

I had the privilege of participating on this panel which was prefaced by a Univision spot highlighting their new campaign efforts of reaching a bi-lingual audience.  In it, an old woman recalls being prevented from speaking her language as a child in school and then we cut to today’s young US Latino man who flips from Spanish to English talking about his liking alternative band, The Strokes as much as Spanish-language pop rock band, Juanes.

What it was about:  Our Latino population in the US is now more than ever embracing a bi-lingual, or more importantly, a bi-literate culture.  Will films reflect the changing demographic of the US as a bi-literate (a Spanish and English language culture) be commercially successful and be able to find an audience?  And perhaps more importantly, will the studio system be able to adapt to the successful strategies many in the independent world are using to create commercially viable content?

Douglas Spain (Star Maps, Walkout, Band of Brothers) is used to wearing multiple hats and so acted as both panelist and moderator.  Spain offered up his experience as an actor/producer/director as a gay latino filmmaker who has successfully worked in independent film and studio and television mediums.  His quest for staying true to himself with the roles and films he is making rang resonant to all.

Ralph Lopez, San Antonio filmmaker: The producer of Wolf which premiered at this year’s SXSW talked about his  aim is to create and tell stories that transcend color.  Like his provocative film about the complexities faced by the victim of a bishop’s inappropriate behavior, his collaborations with director black filmmaker Ya Ke Smith comes first and foremost from a place of telling moving stories.

Gabriela Tagliavini, filmmaker (Ladies Night, Without Men, The Mule: Having had big success with Spanish language film Ladies Night in 2006, Gabriela switched languages and directed Eva Longoria in the English language film, Without Men which sold to many international territories given Longoria’s international brand name.  With her upcoming film, The Mule she is looking to take advantage of the crime action genre and star Sharon Stone to offer real commentary on immigration and the dangerous toll of the US Mexico border.

Luis Reyes, historian and author of  the comprehensive book, Hispanics in Hollywood: The old school gent on our panel made some slightly more conventional suggestions on how to make a successful bi-literate film like “know your audience” and attaching a well known actor to your film so you can market it.

I added my two cents and in retrospect I think my thoughts coincided with Rastegar’s in the proactive vein of here’s what we can-do positive approach of encouraging budding filmmakers to utilize genre (horror and gay US Latino films stand out from the stack and are sought after by festival programs).  I also asked my fellow panelists if they found the US Latino filmmaking community as fragmented as I see it.  Unlike Black or LGBT film organizations I feel the US Latino community has much more work in becoming inclusive within our distinct bi-lingual backgrounds in order to successfully empower and advocate for our films. Organizations like NALIP and LALIFF were mentioned in answer.  But in my opinion and with all respect, I find NALIP a bit cliquesh and lacking a younger pulse and generation of organizers, and LALIFF is too inconsistent to make fundamental cultural change.  Although we touched on the question of the challenges our community faces working in Spanish versus English I’m not sure we fully stayed on point in attempting to answer the ambitious subject and interesting talking points raised.  But the audience seemed more the type of wanting basic advice on how to break into filmmaking so most questions and conversations was directed to the filmmakers on the panels and in that regard it was a successful exchange.

Café Latino presented by HBO and supported by University of Guadalajara Foundation

credit: Juan Tallo

Made evident by the participating film clips that were shown before the panel there is much genre and story diversity in the Latino films at LA Film Fest this year.  I’m especially happy the Festival recognizes the growing influence of the Mexican documentary by having selected Reportero by Bernardo Ruiz, Canicula by Jose Alvarez and Drought by Everardo Gonzalez.  The panel was ostensibly about the Festival’s Latin American filmmakers and how they explore their roles as storytellers in an increasingly global world.  With such a high number of panelists and so many interesting topics broached however, it left one wanting more time to engage with the personable talents onstage.

Alejandro Brugues, director of Juan of the Dead (credit: Juan Tallo)

Reed Johnson encouraged the panelists to chime in at will which Alejandro Brugues, director of Cuban Zombie film, Juan of the Dead took full advantage of to defend big hollywood films like The Avengers, which Gonzalez  initially brought up if only to point out the David and Goliath challenge filmmakers in Mexico face having to compete for screens against these big money backed blockbusters.  Brugues set himself apart from the group by defending his love for the blockbuster which inspired him to direct films. Unlike his peers’ ‘artful’ films he considers his film strictly for public entertainment (he joked that his film is actually a documentary).  Yet at the same time he admits he took advantage of the Zombie genre a la Romero to infuse it with his personal observations of contemporary Cuban society – which he would not have been able to shoot in Cuba otherwise.

Reed Johnson, Everardo Gonzalez, Dominga Sotomayor, Arturo Pons, Alejandro Brugues, Jose Alvarez, Bernardo Ruiz
(credit: Juan Tallo)

Meanwhile Arturo Pons who was born in Mexico but has lived and worked in Spain for the past ten years described his conception for his surreal satire, The Compass is Carried by the Dead Man not necessarily about immigration but a visual canvas with which to paint the total disorientation that confronts Mexico. Ruiz talked about seeing himself as a ‘translator’ or vessel to tell stories.  Alvarez talked about how he does not think of his audience as he makes his films however he does aspire to showcase Mexico Profundo in showing the vast and vibrant indigenous artistry and folklore and deliberately resisting the the media’s monopolized perpetuation of the drug violence and corruption.  Lastly, Dominga Sotomayor, the 27 year old director of Thursday till Sunday whose next film Tarde Para Morir was selected to the first ever Sundance Mahindra Screenwriters Lab, added that like Mexico, in Chile there is a growing number of filmmakers but no real venues to find their audience.

LA Film Festival is going on through Sunday and a bunch of added screenings have been slotted.  Check out film guide and buy tickets here.

Hola! Mexico Film Festival 2012 announces lineup

In only four years of existence, Hola Mexico has proven there is a voracious appetite for contemporary Mexican cinema in Los Angeles.   This year the festival has scored a couple noteworthy coups – the US premiere of Dias De Gracia by Everardo Gout, an adrenaline fueled multi-linear action drama that screened last year in Cannes, and the International premiere of a film currently smashing box office records for a documentary theatrical release in Mexico, De Panzanzo! , a social advocacy piece about the public education system in Mexico directed by Juan Carlos Rulfo and Carlos Loret de Mola.

Another personal favorite of mine on the roster includes Kyzza Terrazas’ first feature, Lenguage de los Machetes.  A fiercely drawn portrait of two anti-establishment artists in Mexico City who confront and conflict with political and biological forces that once fueled their creative expression and now threaten to drive them apart.  Jessy Bulbo, real life rockstar, gives a commanding performance – I hope she comes and performs after the screening!

Hola Mexico Film Festival will take place May 24 – May 30 and all screenings will be hosted in Hollywood at the Ricardo Montalban theatre (across from Trader Joes off Vine).  In all, thirteen feature length films (four documentary) and eight short films (under 65min).  Full list of films and descriptions HolaMexico2012_PR_Program_Eng

What is El Rey? – coverage from NALIP 2012

Chicana from Chicago is on the scene at NALIP 2012 thanks to Latin Heat.  Armed with a press badge, two borrowed flipcams and camera, I’ll be uploading video and writing coverage from the panels, guests and parties this weekend to find out what la nueva onda of US latino voices are saying about our place in the mainstream.  As a teaser, here’s a short spot from Robert Rodriguez about his new network.  I apologize for the link.  Apparently I don’t have the video setting to embed (its $50, thanks wordpress).

RMFF 2012 – The inaugural Mayan beach festival makes for a dazzling debutante

There is a hot new destination film festival on the circuit.  Taking place within the archaeological paradise on the eastern tip of the Yucatan Peninsula, the first edition of the Riviera Maya Film Festival kicked off March 20th and concluded just yesterday, March 25.   Over the six days, 70 feature films were presented in four exotic venues in the Mexican state of Quintana Roo; open-air screenings on the white sand of Cancun, amid the mystical scenery of Tulum, Cozumel, Holbox, and its main venue in Playa Del Carmen. If the enviable Mexican Caribbean picturesque photos and film buzz is any indicator, it looks and sounds like it was stellar  success.

When I browsed the program on the cleanly no- cap designed website, I was really impressed by the quality of the Mexican films (by far the best selection I’ve seen put together in a while,) as well as the glitzy galas and the Planetario section, dedicated to globally conscious, environmental films.  Over half of the program were Mexico premieres, and it included cinephilic treats like This is Not A Film by Jafar Panahi, Hirokazu Kore-eda’s Deseo, Wim Wenders’ Pina, as well as high profile genre film, the new Clive Owen starrer Intruders by Goya winning director, Juan Carlos Fresnadillo (28 Weeks Later, Intact).

This dude has excellent taste - and makes A+ films

Given the remarkable programming, I wasn’t surprised then to find out that none other than Michel Lipkes was responsible as the Director of Programming.  Lipkes is an excellent tastemaker/programmer/filmmaker.  He use to Program FICCO for years, he made a solid directing debut with the b/w minimal existential odyssey,  Malaventura (Morelia FF, Rotterdam FF).  His production company Axolote Cine has generated Mexican independent films that play festivals worldwide.  He also runs Mexico City’s Cineteca, a type of Lincoln Film Society. The director of The Riviera Maya Film Festival is Paula Chaurand who has worked as editor of Quintana Roo cultural magazine La Tempestad. Chaurand talks about making RMFF an ‘inclusive festival, the objective being that it is for the local population which is young under 40 crowd.  Every screening at the festival is free and open to the public.

Executive Director of RMFF, Paula Charaund

So how do you get high profile talent, build out screenings in breathtaking landscapes and be able to offer half a million in cash prizes?  Sponsorship.  I’m always curious about festival sponsors and here the usual suspects are involved; Conaculta via IMCINE and Cinepolis, the biggest theater chain in Mexico.  Just like the film industry, its federal funded.  What’s distinct here however is the tremendous support of the state tourism boards.  Chaurand attributes the healthy budget of the festival to the governor of Quintana Roo, Roberto Angulo.  The cinematic initiative is part of his bigger vision to establish and incorporate a healthy film hub to add to the robust tourism trade.

Along with A-list actor Clive Owen, the festival’s guests of honor included Ethan Hawke (not sure why but he’s still sexy), Mary Harron, Pilar López de Ayala, Matheiu Demy and Daniel Nettheim (The Hunter).  The all male jury of the Mexican Competition dubbed Plataforma consisted of Diego Lerer, a film critic and writer from Buenos Aires, Eugenio Polgovsky, Mexican documentarian, and Sandino Saravia, Uruguayan producer. From the 11 titles in Mexican competition (6 fiction, 5 doc) they bestowed the Premio Kukulkaan which comes with a rich cash prize of roughly 100k USD, to documentary Cuates De Australia (Drought) by Everardo Gout which recently won at FICG , and Matias Meyer for Los Ultimos Cristeros (2011 Toronto Film Festival).  The Jurado Joven award, given by a group of university students chose to recognize Jose Alvarez’s gorgeous Totonacas documentary portrait, Canicula.

"You, me and five bucks"

On top of the stellar films, the Riviera Maya Film Festival has ambitiously tackled a mini-market by establishing the Riviera Lab, a boutique co-production market and work in progress showcase.  10 projects in the co-production market and 8 films from the works in progress.

Tormentero - winner of the lab

The three projects awarded 200,000 MX pesos (20k USD):

Reimon by  Rodrigo Moreno (El Custodio) from Argentina/Colombia

Tormentero by Ruben Imaz (Familia Tortuga) from Mexico

Nueva Espana, Raya Martin from the Phillipines

While Tanta Agua a film from Uruguay/Ecuador written and directed by Ana Guevara and Leticia Jorge Romero won the works in progress section, on top of the 200,000 MX (Basically 20k) pesos another 46,000 USD in post production services.

Other notable participants in the Riviera Lab include Julio Hernandez Cordon (Marimbas del Infiero), Enrique Rivero (whose 2008 Parque Via is a favorite of mine), Yulene Olaizola (Las Intimidades de Shakespeare, Paraisos Artificiales) who has Fogo in post, and Laura Amelia Guzman (Jean Gentil, Cochochi) who’s latched on as producer to Gabriel Nuncio, a Canana producer turned directing with the film Cumbres in post. One participant I’m personally eager and curious to track is Arami Ullon from Paraguay (18 1/2 cigarettes) who had a project in the co-production, El Tiempo Nublado.

Kyzza Terrazas w/d of my fave punk film, Lenguage de los Machetes, with Gabriel Nuncio who had Cumbres in the WIP
 Congratulations to Michel Lipkes for programming an incredible, world class festival, and the rest of the team at RMFF for competing in their very first rodeo with high class style.
Download the miniguides here and here
like RMFF on FB here

The Sweet Success of SXSW

It seems like only yesterday I stepped off the train after a grueling 29 hour Amtrak from LA and arrived in Austin for my very first SXSW.  In reality it’s been over a week ago and I feel like Geoff Marslett in that How Not Be Lame @ SXSW bumper trailer, where he transforms over the course of the Festival from entitled hollywood suit outsider pretentious douche into an entitled keep-it-wierd converted local douche.  My attempt of recapping the ruckus that has led up to my current dazed and confused state has proven a bit tricky.  Luckily the remnants of fliers, postcards, and business cards in my swagbag, plus scrolling through the week’s sloppy texts,  tweets and photos have helped jog my muggy memory of what was an Epic first South By.

mi pelicula favorita!

The Films – Hard and edgy on the outside, sweet and tender on the inside.

All in, I averaged about 3 films a day.  I feel bad for not having seen more, but the nonstop lounges, panels, parties and street grub posed serious detours on my way to see films. The first movie I saw here was the divisive satire comedy, Los Chidos, by Omar Rodriguez Lopez.  Having seen a rough cut before, I knew exactly what Janet Pierson, Festival Director who introduced the film, meant when she said with a smirk  “ I can’t wait to get your reactions to this”.   Los Chidos is by far one of my favorite films so far in 2012.  I’m thrilled that SXSW had the balls to put it in competition. The progressive music prodigy and son of a psychiatrist, Rodriguez Lopez has a fierce voice and much to say.  At the Q&A he was asked why he chose to portray Mexicans like the mysogynist, homophobic sloths.  I wish everyone who saw the film had the opportunity to hear his A because he really provides rich context to the swirling grotesque images that shock your senses, all of which are well thought out subversive analogies about the male psyche.

I also loved Bob Byington’s third feature, Somebody Up There Likes Me in the Narrative Spotlight section.  Anyone who knows Bob knows he’s an odd egg and a cynical yet charming singularity infuses his romantic comedies.   The film inhabits this non sequitur, pseudo reality yet for all the quirky fancy, the actual moments and feelings of bitterness, regret, heart, and self-deprecating humor couldn’t be more genuine and relatable.  I like filmmakers who defy film conventions for story effect.  Much like Omar plays with Los Chidos with the obvious dubbing dialogue effect as a throwback tribute to shlocky Mexican 70s movies, here Bob forgoes the phoniness of putting on makeup to show his characters age throughout the thirty years span of the movie.  Everyone pretty much looks the same at the end.   Because really who likes to see themselves age.

The multi-hypenate w/d/p beauty Adele Romansky

Leave me Like You Found Me, Ms. Adele Romanski’s directing debut really affected me and is also one of my faves. A perceptive, earnestly written and well acted film about when to call a relationship quits and how the nostalgia of a lost love washes over the ugliness of how it actually went down.  David Nordstrom (Sawdust City) and Megan Boone give some awesome naturalistic performances.  (How many times have you asked or been asked in a relationship, Why do you love me?).  I thanked Adele for making the film, and she said many others have, because its one of those films where one gets to entertain the illusion of trying to get back together with the ex and what that might look like.  Also worth mentioning and not just for diversity sake is Wolf, a first feature by Ya’Ke Smith.  An all black cast film about a teen who protects the preacher with whom he had an illicit relationship.  It’s a nuanced storyline that was just shy of gripping because the script and acting were a tad uneven.

I also thoroughly enjoyed Crazy Eyes by Adam Sherman which Strand picked up for a summer release.  I tend to be culturally sensitive to the myriad of American films about rich white people’s problems (who cares) but once in a while the filmmaker successfully makes its rich white character relative and poignant, and I would be guilty of dismissing it just because (The Comedy for instance, which I also found tragic brilliant and premiered at Sundance and also played here).   That girl from Californication, Madeline Zima and Lukas Haas who plays a Hollywood millionaire have a year long drunken relationship where she refuses to have sex with him.  They smoke, do drugs, drink and fight like decadent zealots.   She accuses him of not having real problems, when ultimately we find run he is way more dysfunctional than she. Thanks to the Tugg Buzz screenings, where the festival adds a screening of films with the most buzz, I caught King Kelly by Andrew Neel about a self-centered internet sex star brat who does not live a second of her life not filming her navel and drama on her iPhone.  Titillating social commentary about our fucked up millenial generation.

The Panels – All you can panel buffet

Nearly as giant as DFW airport, the Austin Convention center and hub of SXSW Film/Interactive/Music

The number of panels, speakers, and sessions is overwhelming and diverse.  And most of them come with cute brand title names.  No doubt its due to their panel picker process in which you can vote on what panels you want to see.  Yours truly participated in a Mentor session about reaching international audiences.  It’s a speed dating style format where registrants sign up and get 15 minutes with you.   I took it a bit personal and was disappointed that there was not a line of people waiting to see me (ego anyone?)but I heard from other much more established industry players that overall this was the case perhaps because of the competing multitude of events.   In a crazy twist of events and much to my surprise one of the four registrants that met me was a cousin I never met!   She had recognized my name and surprised the heck out of me when she said “Hi, I’m Myrna.  I’m your cousin”.  We had an impromptu reunion and started to piece together our estranged family – most of whom I found out are in Texas or Oklahoma.  I caught a little bit of the Have Latin American Media become Social, where the main takeaway is that there is not much overall internet penetration in Mexico and even less in Central America.  The big broadcasters like Azteca and Univision are dominating with interactive sports and telenovelas forums. But that said, there’s lots of room growth.  I sat through “How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love VOD, moderated by Orly Ravid and included, Nolan Gallagher/Gravitas,  Eamon Bowles/Magnolia, Dylan Marchetti/Variance films and Matt Harlok who shared his successful case study of his documentary, American: The Bill Hicks Story.  Read the PDF presentation here. The last few pages offer some good takeaways by the experts.  What I mostly absorbed was that every film needs a ‘specialist’ or a savvy business producer filmmaker to exploit the  wild west and not yet tested opportunities out there as its all on a very case to case basis. Second is “Know your windows”. My last panel of the fest was Indiewire’s Eric Kohn asking some very straight to the point questions to Caveh Zahedi, filmmaker of SXSW doc, The Sheik And I, which has some controversy surrounding the filmmaker’s take on Islamic Society and what constitutes as a mockumentary.  I think – as I did not see it but I wonder if its as duplicitously brilliant like a Mads Brugger film (Red Chapel, The Ambassador).  I also caught the final Indiewire panel  in which Dana Harris and Eric talked with a gruffy voiced Festival Director, Janet Pierson and Senior Programmer/Operations Manager Jared Neece about this year’s festival.  Its hard to recap an event that is still going but I applaud their programming, spirit, and most of all knowing their audiences.

The Music – where it all began and where it all goes to hell

There was a noticeable shift of crowds – larger and rowdier when the Music portion of

Biggest Music Discovery for me! Must check out Filastine

SXSW began on Tuesday.  Suddenly it was green badges galore.  6th street blew up with armies of transient musicians, marketing hulu hoop ploys, and impromptu drum circles. I happened across one of the Music pocket guides which lists each venue and the 2000+ bands and got excited at the prospects.  Plus there had to have been at least another another hundred of performers in the unofficial and so called “anti-sxsw” vein.  If it was difficult to adhere to a screening schedule, it was nearly impossible to try to keep a music schedule. After Wednesday, it was very go with the flow, but I got to see a lot more movies since most film folks had left.   Wednesday night I had the pleasure of experiencing Filastine, an international world-like dubstep hard to categorize explosion of sound whose maestro is Greg Filastine an Oklahoma native now living in Barcelona who drums everything including a shopping cart.  And right next door at the Speakeasy were the fine firecracker ladies, Lila Downs and Cucu Diamantes who had a documentary, called Amor Cronico in the festival.  I also danced my ass off to electro cumbia mixer DJ Mr. Pauer.

The Parties – Messin’ with Texas

Pro-skater Kenny Anderson. Hot. and taken.

I missed the first couple days of parties since I felt the need to see the Midnight flicks but I got up to speed pretty quickly on Monday night with the Gayby/Wholphin party at Cheer Up Charlies.  A great Texas joint where I was happy to see all my LA and NY friends.  The Film Awards ceremony on Tuesday was thankfully brief and I found a seat next to my homey Trevor Anderson, short filmmaker of High Level Bridge and The Man That Got Away and Sundance pal, David Courier. I also met Louis Black the founder of this here shindig, an old G who was praising Janet Pierson’s helming.  Before the actual party at Stage opened, I grabbed a slice and hung out with the Los Chidos posse.  By Thursday, I turned into a film zombie fueled by Doritos and Tito’s vodka. I would get downtown by 1030am just in time to go to the lounge for some breakfast tacos to-go and start my day off with an 11am screening.   My new Russian friend Selena from St. Petersburg and I became fest buddies this way; we’d go see a movie then go back then to the lounge for drinks.  Repeat.  After four films on Friday I skipped the downtown melee and went over to the East side, to this rustic but mod spot called Hillside Pharmacy, then later to a rowdy place called Yellow Jacket also on the East side where there was no badge in sight.  I seriously thought I was done for by Saturday.  That is, until I heard there was a Converse Thrasher party at Scoot Inn where there’d be hot skaters. We rolled up and met up with pro-skaters and derelicts, plus got to see Kreayshawn do her Gucci Gucci, and trip-hop, The Cool Kids from my hometown Chicago perform.    I have never seen so many dirty skaters and hot girls in one place.  500 Pabst Blue Ribbons later we went to The Grackle where we heard a pretty cool all girl punk Japanese band, ZZZs and where thanks to the East Side Kings food truck had the best damn pork ribs I’ve ever had in my life.  Afterwards a pedi-cab to the car sealed my last night of brouhaha.

Like the 120,000+ SXSW participants that stormed Austin this week, I’m slowly stepping back into ho-drum reality.  Now that I got my first SXSW taste I am hooked!  Big besos and thanks to Claudette Godfrey, Fest Coordinator and Programmer who is the reason I took on this gonzo-esque journey.

Jury winners here

Audience winners here

How I feel right now here

Guadalajara International Film Festival – Recap

The  27th Guadalajara International Film Festival, FICG27 drew to a close last Saturday, March 10.  The biggest and oldest festival in Mexico with the most important Latin market (Argentina’s Ventana Sur might steal that rank soon though) included over 1000 titles in its video library, 30 young filmmakers in the Talent Campus,  and an expansive film program with over 300 films.  At a festival this overwhelming, they key to navigate it is strategy.  This was the second year under Festival Director Ivan Trujillo’s belt.  Unfortunately the Mexican narrative feature competition remains pretty weak save for a couple out of the 13 films.  The jury awards announced on Sunday declared Best Mexican Feature to Mariachi Gringo by Tom Gustfson and Best Mexican Documentary went to Cuates de Australia by Everardo Gonzalez.  The awards doled out were many many more.  For the full list click here.

I wasn’t at the awards ceremony where I might have been able to hear the Mexican feature jury who consisted of Osvaldo Montes, músico (Argentina); Christian Dimitriu, director de archivo (Argentina); Paulo Antonio Paranaguá, periodista (Brasil); Reynaldo González, escritor (Cuba); y Mane Cisneros, directora del Festival de Cine Africano de Tarifa (Spain), to deliver their statement.  No matter, because I am at a puzzled loss over their choice of Mariachi Gringo, a poorly scripted, highly commercial novella at best.  I would maybe expect it as garnering an Audience Award given Lila Down’s featured role.  But even the Audience displayed better taste and their affection for genre, as it went to El Espacio Interior, or as I’ve heard people call it the Mexican 127 Hours, starring Kuno Becker in a surprisingly most solid performance to date.  I find it incredible that La Demora, got nothing.  Un Mundo Secreto also got an Audience Award.  I am happy about documentary Cuates de Australia by Everardo González as best documentary, which Robert Koehler totally called out before I left as his favorite.  It surely must have been the toughest jury deliberation –  (Humberto Ríos, documentalista (Argentina); Giuliano Salvatore, filmmaker (Venezuela) and Pituka Ortega, filmmaker and Associate Director, Festival de Cine de Panama, becauseMexican documentaries are where its at.

I got in on the first Friday of the festival, March 2 and checked in at the swanky Camino Real across from the Expo, the hub of market activity.  As a big fan of the Festival’s beautiful artwork, I immediately bought some merchandise.  I meant to inquire about the poster contest they have each year which gives them an edge in that arena.  I ran into some new friends from the Monterrey Film Festival and decided to join them for Mis Memorias de Mis Putas Tristes, a Marquez adaptation by Henning Carlsen which was fitting given the author’s anniversary that weekend.  A coughing fit prevented me from watching it through and through but what I did see was not enough to place this newest adaptation apart from the hundreds of other stiff attempts.  I did the right thing and stayed in the first two nights so I missed The Opening night,which was oddly on the second night of the festival.  The film was Another Year, I guess because Mike Leigh was a guest of honor, along with the dapper Cubano Americano Andy Garcia, and Mexican filmmaker Gabriel Retes.  The festival’s country spotlight and guest was the UK, a rather strange programming choice, if you ask me.  Although to be fair, they did have a spotlight (not as well lit) on Ecuador.  Among the 6 films,  Sebastian Cordero’s Pescador, a Sundance supported film but not among them surprisingly was this great Ecuador film I recently saw called Porcelain Horse.  I did however see it in the concurrently running Miami International Film Festival so kudos to them for grabbing it. Looking at the thick FICG27 catalogue, there are some really random programming sidebars like one simply entitled, Melodrama.  There was not too much US fare but they did well in screening Without by Mark Jackson who I just learned use to live in Mexico City and is a considered an honorary “Chilango”.  The other US film that seemed to come out of nowhere was a film by Matthew Modine called, Jesus was a Commie.  Has anyone heard of this?

On Saturday March 3 I took part in a panel for the Guadalajara Talent Campus.  The subject was how to use social media to help your distribution but it was incongruently called, Stories on Everyone’s Lips.  My pal Sydney Levine and Peter Belsito were there to support and agreed it was lacking focus and was partly hijacked by the boys.  Although I’m no expert, I drew from my colleagues and resources like Sundance Artist Services Page, The Film Collaborative and Ted Hope’s Hope For Film to tell the kids that if they make their own noise and connect with their audience, all these alternative models will come to them.

The problem with traveling to festivals shortly after Sundance, is that you will run into people who are quick to point out that you, as in the entity known as Sundance, rejected their film.  Although as a Programming Associate I am not on the hook because I do not actually make the selection, I naturally try to diffuse their acrimony.  I ask which film, if I saw it, I let them know what I liked about it and console them in that there were so many good films we lost out.  That tends to work.  But given this year Sundance that did not select one single film from Mexico, be it narrative, documentary or short, it was a little tricky.  It hasn’t been that great a year for feature fiction, documentaries tend to be more ethnographic and regional, and shorts selected are 86 out of 6000 submissions.

with Anne Hoyt and Mike Leigh

Sunday night’s Industry cocktail was like many of the festival’s fiestas, far from the Expo, about a 20 minute festival transpo ride, but a chance to catch up with familiar faces.  After some good schmoozing and saying hello to Canana Director of Distribution Cristina Garza and CEO Julian Levin,. I linked up with frequent Morelia Film Festival guest and partner in crime Anne Wakefield Hoyt, veteran journalist based in D.C. who was there on the FIPRESCI jury. We walked over to the British Film Institute cocktail which was by far the most fancy affair of my festival.  It was  in a gorgeously handsome diplomatic building on the rooftop which had a magical view of the whole city and the remarkable cathedral skyline all lit up, with a beautiful starry night in background to boot.  Anne scored her interview with Mike Leigh and I got a chance to kiss him and tell him Secrets & Lies is my favorite.

The next couple days I did speed dating with the Talent Campus kids where I heard pitches for projects, both narrative and documentary that needed co-production partners or financing.  I could offer neither but was able to connect a few to Sundance Institute and suggest other development workshops.  It’s inspiring to hear the passion pour out of them and their connection to the projects is often quite personal.  One of the filmmaking teams I met was awarded the $150,000 in finishing funds.  Their project is a narrative called UIO, a film from Ecuador by Micaela Rueda that features a coming of age, lesbian romance.  A documentary that piqued my interest is a miner documentary in Bolivia in which the miners give sacrifices to gods in exchange for letting them come out alive every day.  The 1 minute trailer transmitted the spooky and eerie depths of the film, its called the Night Inside of Us.

I squeezed as many movies I could at the video library.  Still I did not get a chance to see many documentaries that came highly recommended from sources I trust, like El Lugar Lejano, El Paciente Interno, and Juan Carlos Rulfo’s new documentary, Carrière, 250 metros.

Part 2

The only good thing about the usually happening Mexican Fiesta on Monday night was that I was introduced to Mexico’s salt of the earth, uber prolific and talented actor Damián Alcázar.  I think I had about five seconds to try to sustain his interest before some pretty young things approached him and cut short my dream of a May December romance.  Instead I made my way to the dance floor and joined Sundance fest vet, Nicole Guillemet, Christine Tröstrum from Berlinale Talent Campus,  and Hebe Tabachnik of LA and Palm Springs Film Festivals.  Once again at the end of the night I made sure to link up with a juror to ensure a ride back to the Expo – a strategic tool I’ve picked up knowing full well that jury never gets left behind by festivals.

Tuesday evening I accompanied mis amigas, Animal Politico journalist, Mariana Linares and documentary film and Morelia Film Festival producer, Daniela Alatorre, to see Chalán by Jorge Michel Grau (Somos Lo Que Hay).  I had no idea it was actually a one-hour and a groundbreaking recent collaboration of Channel 22, a ten year old broadcaster, and IMCINE, in an effort to supply contemporary and original content on public broadcast. Unlike US cable successes like HBO and Showtime, Mexico does not have an equivalent.  The testosterone battle of wits and blackmail between a corrupt congressman and his Go-fer (that’s what Chalán means) go head to toe in this dark yet oddly flippant film (Like El Infierno and other narcocomedies, the heightened cinematic portrayal of corruption in Mexico is not that exaggerated or far from the dire reality, making it an uncomfortable paradox).  The only females pictured here are the secretary, and the politician’s battered mistress who we never get to see (just sayin).

After the film, we headed out to a delicious dinner accompanied by Mariana’s erudite and genial father,  Marco Julio Linares who heads Eficine, the big fiscal film producer tax incentive, Article 226,  and Víctor Ugalde, filmmaker and president of Sociedad Mexicana de Directores-Realizadores de Obras Audiovisuales, (similar to the DGA but not exactly).  Although that same night Guadalajara’s version of the Teddy Awards was going on complete with a drag queen beauty pageant, the award borrowed and cleverly inaugurated as Premios Maguey  (get it? Ma-gay), this impromptu dinner was so much more fun and special.  I sat back absorbing the stories by the two vets at the table.  At the same restaurant, I spotted independent producer, Jaime Romandia of Mantarraya Films, whose Post Tenebras Lux by Carlos Reygadas has the world salivating with anticipationHis joint distribution company with Reygadas NDM has picked up prestigious euro titles like Bela Tarr’s Turin Horse and Kaurismaki’s Le Havre for Mexico.  Later we had a couple tequilas with amiable and passionate filmmaker Leopoldo Gout, producer of last year’s out of competition Cannes film Dias De Gracia – an adrenaline fueled, gritty crime drama which you will hear more about soon as I hear it has been picked up for US distribution.

An especially good run in at the market was when I saw Rodrigo Guerrero of Dynamo Films and producer of festival favortie and critically acclaimed film Contracorriente (Undertow). One of the exciting projects he is working on is a website he’s branding Discover Film Talents, a site that is curated by both content and users and concept is where festival programmers can connect with works in progress films, and directors can connect with screenwriters.  He is currently developing it by partnering up with festival workshops and incubators like the Talent Campus.  I’m really excited about this as it would be a critical resource and tool to connect the global industry.

Wednesday I was conflicted because I wanted to continue to see the Works in Progress but also catch the Mexican State of Cinema and Television panels.  I did manage to catch the Chilean work in progress film by Che Sandoval, “You think you are the most talented but you are the biggest whore”.  A loose spinoff his earlier film which played the San Francisco International Film Festival last year, “You think you are the prettiest but you are the biggest whore”.  Obviously he’s matured just a bit.  The inconsequential but hilariously entertaining raunchy comedy is about a loser deadbeat who can’t deal with his responsibility as a husband and father.   Back to the panels I made sure to get the second annual publication that Imcine puts out, an extremely informative and in-depth annual study of the Mexican film industry.  It’s got tons of stats and figures and bars about 2011 production, exhibition and the digital future of Mexico’s audiovisual industry.  I highly recommend you take a look at the data available 2011 Mexican Film report.  Here are just a few interesting figures:

Total box office revenue 9,755 million pesos  (*562 screens)

Don Gato, the children’s animated film was the highest grossing Mexican film and placed 23 in general ranking

111 Mexican films produced in 2011

Total films released 321. Mexican films released 62.

82% produced with state support.

Documentary is on the rise as releases went up from 7 to 13 and attendance rose significantly.

Presunto Culpable is now the 3rd Mexican highest grossing film of all time. El Crimen de Padre Amaro in 2002 continues to be the highest grossing of all time followed by Y Tu Mama Tambien in 2001

*Mexico is currently the country with the most screens in Latin America and the best ratio of inhabitant per screen. Since 2001, the number of screens has increased steadily, at a rate of 9% a year, however, they are concentrated in a few cities; only an estimated 8% of municipalities have even one. About 58% of the national population lives in these cities, which means that 42% of Mexicans do not have access to a movie screen in their locality

~My last night happily coincided with IMCINE’s fiesta, which never fails to be the best dance party.  Before hitting up the party I headed to Un Mundo Secreto’s premiere party at this great local mezcaleria. I hung out with John Hopewell a Scottish expat who’s been living in Mexico for 15 years and writes for Variety, and his compadre and colleague, John Hecht. I found Carmen Ortega Casanovas, producer of  Juan Orol, Rey Del Churro in narrative competition, (based on the real life Orol, who is like the Roger Corman of Mexican B films), and we headed to the bash where we danced all night.  The perfect finish of the night was grabbing tacos and chelas with a group of talented, intelligent and fun girlfriends.

The next morning, just as I was leaving for the airport I saw none other than Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas Solórzano, three time presidential candidate and PRD moral leader, arrive at the hotel sans bodyguards (Read my review on the documentary about him, El Ingeniero here).  I said hello and told him how much I appreciated getting to know him through the documentary. He shook my hand and asked me where I was from, to which I responded; I’m a Chicana from Chicago.