Showing posts with label guatemala. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guatemala. Show all posts

1 May 2020

Gunpowder Heart



Camila Urrutia : 2019
Pólvora en el corazón

Claudia and María have fallen in love. They roam the streets of the city of Guatemala. Claudia works at a call centre and is uninterested in the world around her. She lives with her activist grandfather, who tries to persuade her to join his cause. María unlike Claudia, is more spontaneous and lives with her mother in the outskirts of the city. The chaotic streets are filled with common stories of abuse, unforgiving police officers, and charming secret corners. Everything changes one night when they are attacked by three men. Although they manage to escape, Claudia is faced with the dilemma of choosing revenge or listening to her grandfather's advice. Camila Urrutia's feature debut premiered in competition at Huelva Ibero-American Film Festival 2019, and was selected to have its North American premiere at SXSW 2020.

3 August 2019

La Llorona



Jayro Bustamante : 2019
The Weeping Woman

With the words "If you cry, I'll kill you" ringing in their ears, Alma and her sons are in Guatemala's armed conflict. Thirty years later, a criminal case is brought against Enrique, a retired general who oversaw the genocide. But he's acquitted through a mistrial and the spirit of La Llorona is unleashed to wander the world like a lost soul amongst the living. At night, Enrique starts to hear her wailing. His wife and daughter believe he's having bouts of Alzheimer's-related dementia. Little could they suspect that their new housekeeper, Alma, is there to mete out the vengeance the trial did not. Jayro Bustamante's third feature was winner of the Giornate degli Autori Director's Award when it premiered in competition at Venice Days 2019.

29 July 2019

Temblores



Jayro Bustamante : 2019
Tremors

When Pablo arrives at his family's house outside Guatemala City, everyone is already waiting tensely for this beloved brother, son and husband to appear. Everyone at the clan's villa is horrified: Pablo has fallen in love with another man, Francisco. In doing so, he is calling into question all the values by which this deeply religious evangelical family lives. In spite of resistance from his relatives, Pablo moves in with Francisco, who is closely linked to the city's subculture and leads a completely different, liberated existence. Pablo loses his old home, but somehow never really settles in the new one. His wish to unite the two worlds turns out to be a dead end. Putting their faith before everything else, his relatives are adamant that Pablo can be 'healed'. With help from their ultra-religious community, the family does everything in its power to get their prodigal son back on track, no matter the cost. Jayro Bustamante's second feature premiered in the Panorama section at Berlin International Film Festival 2019.

31 January 2015

La casa más grande del mundo



Ana V Bojórquez & Lucía Carreras : 2015
The Greatest House in the World

Every morning the herd has to be taken out to graze in the mountains and then brought home again at night. Every day Rocío, a wistful Mayan girl living in the Guatemalan highlands, accompanies her pregnant mother while she tends the sheep. When her mother goes into premature labour, Rocío has to tend the sheep on her own. She is really too young for the job but there is no other way. As ever, Rocío whiles away the time with a friend, building the largest houses in the world with little stones. And then, all of a sudden it has happened: one sheep – the smallest – is missing. Her friend cannot help in the search for long because she has to take her own animals back home. Left on her own, Rocío guides her flock through the rugged mountains in pursuit of the lost lamb. When she finally finds it, she loses the rest of the herd. Things could not get worse. Night begins to fall. What should she do? As the fog rises she has to make her way over a swaying rope bridge and into unfamiliar territory. Left to fend for herself, Rocío manages to rise above herself and conquer her fears. Poetically, we come full circle, as one girl grows up and another enters the world. Ana V Bojórquez and Lucía Carreras's collaborative feature debut premiered in the Generation Kplus section at Berlin International Film Festival 2015.

25 September 2014

Ixcanul



Jayro Bustamante : 2014
Ixcanul Volcano

María, a 17-year-old Mayan Kaqchikel girl, lives with her parents in a coffee plantation on the side of an active volcano in Guatemala. She is awaited by an arranged marriage she doesn't want but can't escape. Despite being an Indian woman, María will try to change her fate. However, a complication with her pregnancy forces her to set out and look for a hospital: the modern world she had always dreamt of will save her life, but at too high a price. Jayro Bustamante's feature debut received an honourable mention from the competition jury when it was presented in the Films in Progress section at San Sebastián International Film Festival 2014. His film was winner of the Silver Bear Alfred Bauer Prize when it premiered in competition at Berlin International Film Festival 2015.

29 May 2014

La voz de los silenciados



Maximón Monihan : 2013
The voice of the voiceless

Olga is seventeen years old. She is deaf. She's leaving home for the USA, she thinks for a better life. As she bids farewell to her family on her way to New York from Central America, Olga thinks that she is going to study at a Christian sign language school. Her family believes in the so-called representatives and has no qualms about entrusting them with their daughter's life. Upon arrival she enters a world of immigrant trafficking, and life is turned upside-down as she's enslaved by a merciless international criminal ring. Forced to sell "I am deaf" trinkets on the subway and subjected to physical and psychological torture, Olga uses courage, cunning, and even humour, to face an unimaginable nightmare-on-loop. Based on a real case broken by the New York Police Department, the film is a dialogue free, fully integrated silent movie, utilising a vibratory, low frequency sound design that places the audience into Olga's headspace, telling the story in her language. Maximón Monihan's feature debut premiered at Mumbai International Film Festival 2013 where it won the Young Critics Jury Award.

2 January 2014

La jaula de oro



Diego Quemada-Díez : 2013
The Golden Dream

Three teenagers from Guatemala – tough guy Juan, Sara, who cuts her hair and binds her breasts in order to pass as a boy, and Samuel, the smallest and most easily swayed of the trio – travel towards the US border in search of a better life. On their journey through Mexico, they meet Chauk, a Tzotzil Indian from Chiapas who doesn't speak Spanish. Sara's blossoming attraction to the boy leads to anger and bitterness, but as the group faces life-and-death challenges from bandits and corrupt law enforcement, they learn crucial life lessons about friendship and loyalty. The journey they are making is long, expensive and full of danger. Travelling together in cargo trains, walking on the railroad tracks, they have to face a harsh reality. With its gritty, near-documentary realism, it is a story about the excitement and horror that many young Central American migrants regularly face. Diego Quemada-Díez's feature debut was winner of the Prix Un Certain Talent in the Un Certain Regard section at Festival de Cannes 2013.

13 August 2012

Polvo



Julio Hernández Cordón : 2012
Dust

Ignacio is 30 years old and already the father of a ten-year-old girl. He has remarried Alejandra and they are expecting a baby. But even if they are both excited about the news, they fear the ghosts of their previous relationships. While trying to come to terms with their new life, the couple produces a documentary about women looking for their husbands and fathers who disappeared during the Guatemalan Civil War in 1982. Amongst the families, they meet Delfina and Juan, mother and son. Sixteen years after her husband's disappearance, Delfina still hopes to find him. Juan is almost the same age as Ignacio and they both share a distant relationship with their mothers. The director's debut feature premiered at Locarno Film Festival 2012.

21 November 2011

Sin Nombre

Nameless
a film by Cary Fukunaga

Focusing on the plight of Honduran illegal immigrants making the dangerous journey through Mexico, the story follows teenager Sayra who is risking everything to find a better life in America with her family. On this fateful first step of her journey she encounters Casper, a tough gang member placed in an impossible situation when a violent retaliation turns his gang against him. As Sayra and Casper's paths cross on a train leading out of the country, with the gang in close pursuit, they must rely on each other if either of them is to make it across the border alive.

El Casper is initiating a young boy into his notoriously brutal gang. The boy is given the name El Smiley following a violent initiation. Casper is romantically involved with a girl, Martha Marlene, but fearing for her safety, keeps their relationship a secret from the other gang members. When she follows him to a gathering of the gang, the leader, Lil' Mago, insists on escorting her away in private, despite Casper's protests. Following his failed rape attempt, Lil' Mago accidentally kills the girl, then coldly tells Casper "You'll find another".

Mago then brings Casper and Smiley to La Bombilla, a location along the train tracks where illegal immigrants stow away on passing trains for travel to the United States. Among the many making this journey is the Honduran family – Sayra, her father and her uncle, who are on their way to New Jersey to live with relatives. Mago, Casper and Smiley board the train and rob the passengers of any money they have until Mago spots Sayra and attempts to molest her. Casper, still grief-stricken and seeing parallels with Mago's treatment of his girlfriend, intervenes, killing Mago and urging Smiley off the train. Throughout the train journey, Sayra repeatedly approaches Casper with concern and curiosity, despite her father's advice. Smiley returns to the gang, telling them what happened. Furious, the new gang leader, El Sol, accuses Smiley of collusion. Smiley timidly protests, begging to be sent to kill Casper to prove his loyalty.

On the train, Casper, who has smuggled gang members in the past, knows the nuances of the journey, instructing fellow passengers when to get off the train and run around the station to avoid immigration officers. At one point Casper is with Sayra's family, but not wanting the girl to face the dangers that surround his own life, he leaves the train quietly while they are sleeping, only to discover that Sayra has followed him. The two journey north on a car transporter, Casper evading local franchises of his gang which are all helping Smiley to track him down.

At a river crossing Casper pays their fares with the digital camera containing the cherished pictures of his murdered girlfriend and insists Sayra goes first. Just as she is half way across, the gang find Casper and after a desperate chase along the riverbank, he encounters Smiley, who shoots him dead. Sayra, now across the border in Texas, calls the phone number she had committed to memory and finally makes contact with her dead father's second family in New Jersey. Smiley, the young boy initiated into the gang by Casper, is now accepted by its members and gets a tattoo commemorating his loyalty.

The recipient of numerous major awards, writer/director Cary Fukunaga's debut feature is an unflinching and controversial tale of gang warfare, loyalty and redemption, set against the harsh backdrop of modern Mexico. Part road movie, part gangster film, part love story, this bleak yet humane film paints a vivid picture of the reality of life in Central America for would-be immigrants to the United States.