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  • SXSW panel: Latino cinema knows no boundaries

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    Under discussion:

    El Mariachi  (1993)

    Desperado  (1995)

    Sin City  (2005)

    Mancora  (2009)

    Ano Una  (2008)

    March 10, 2008
    By Laura Tillman

    Along with films and music, Austin's annual South by Southwest festival offers pass-holders the chance to attend intimate panel discussions with experts and some of their favorite artists.

    Monday, three of the festival's Latin American born filmmakers joined moderator Charles Ramirez Berg, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin, to discuss "New Trends in Latino Cinema." About 30 seconds into the talk, however, they realized they might not have much to say on the given subject.

    "I think there is a change in that Latino filmmakers are getting away from being so easily identified or grouped together and I think that's good," said Berg, who initially organized the event as a conversation between himself and producer Elizabeth Avellan.

    Avellan, who worked with her husband Robert Rodriguez on films like "El Mariachi," "Desperado," and "Sin City," recommended that Peruvian director Ricardo de Montreuil, who brought his film "Mancora" to the festival, join the conversation. Then, when they discovered that Mexican director Jonas Cuaron, the 26-year-old son of "Y Tu Mama Tambien" director Alfonso Cuaron, was bringing his first film "Ano Una" to the festival, they invited him to join in.

    Berg welcomed the panelists to discuss whether each of them recognized any trends in Latino cinema, and Cuaron, the youngest of the group, quickly questioned the term itself.

    "I think talking in general about Latin American cinema becomes restrictive," he said. "I have Mexican cinema influences, but I also love Iranian and European cinema."

    The other filmmakers underscored this sentiment. It's limiting to categorize Hispanic filmmakers as Hispanic, they said. Filmmakers are filmmakers and the movies they make are as diverse as the Americas themselves.

    "Some films in neighboring Latin American countries are never even screened in those other countries," said Montreuil, pointing out that while the nations are close together, their respective artistic communities might be more foreign than most people realize.

    The panelists own films prove this point. Montreuil's film "Mancora" brings viewers to Peru and takes its 22-year-old protagonist on a story of dark self-discovery and redemption following his father's suicide.

    Cuaron's film on the other hand is an often comedic, experimental collection of photographs documenting an actual year of the filmmaker's life. Cuaron then set a fictional narrative over the photographs, offering an un-stereotypical look at an American tourist's experience in Mexico City.

    Ultimately, the filmmakers said they appreciated the evolution of filmmaking in Latin American countries, but they were eager to move on.

    "I believe that the world wants to hear new voices, new forms even in mainstream cinema," said Avellan. "I think we're ready for new stories told a different way."

    Source: The Brownsville Herald 


  • Samantha Morton kept stroke a secret

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    Under discussion:

    Control  (2007)

    British actress Samantha Morton has revealed to Observer Music Monthly that she suffered a stroke in 2006 but kept it hidden from the press.

    The Oscar-nominated actress, who recently appeared in Elizabeth: The Golden Age and Ian Curtis biopic Control, said she suffered a stroke in 2006, days after being struck on the head when part of her ceiling collapsed.

    Morton admits her friendship with Spiritualized singer Jason Pierce, who survived pneumonia, and his girlfriend Juliette helped her come through the illness.

    "Jason and I have been mirroring each other," Morton said. "He was really sick and then I had a stroke at the beginning of [that] year.

    "Their friendship knows no bounds. He was the only person I knew who understood what that was like, being near to death."

    Morton's stroke was so serious she had to learn how to walk again. The 30-year-old made a full recovery and gave birth to her second child, Edie, in January this year.

    Source: Digital Spy


  • 'Gilligan's Island' star busted for pot

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    Under discussion:

    DRIGGS, Idaho - Perhaps they should have called her Mary Jane.

    A surprise birthday party for Dawn Wells, the actress who played Mary Ann on "Gilligan's Island," ended with a nearly three-hour tour of the Teton County sheriff's office and jail when the 69-year-old was caught with marijuana in her vehicle while driving home.

    Wells is now serving six months' unsupervised probation. She was sentenced Feb. 29 to five days in jail, fined $410.50 and placed on probation after pleading guilty to one count of reckless driving.

    Prosecutors dropped misdemeanour counts of driving under the influence, possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a controlled substance.

    According to a sheriff's, Wells was pulled over after she swerved across the fog lines and centre lines of State Highway 33 and repeatedly speeded up and slowed down.

    The officer who stopped her said he smelled burning marijuana.

    Wells reportedly told him that she'd just given a ride to three hitchhikers and had dropped them off when they began smoking something.

    Police found three half-smoked joints in the ashtray, a fourth half-smoked joint and two small cases used to store marijuana.

    Wells' lawyer Ron Swafford said a friend admitted he'd left a small amount of marijuana in the car after having used it that day and that Wells was unaware of it.

    Wells is the founder of the Idaho Film and Television Institute in Driggs and the organizer of the region's annual family movie festival called the Spud Fest.

    Source: AP


  • Ten Non-Definitively Classic Movies

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    Under discussion:

    Breaking Away  (1979)

    Manhattan  (1979)

    Raising Arizona  (1987)

    The Sting  (1973)

    Trading Places  (1983)

    The Mask  (1994)

    1. Manhattan: A Woody Allen classic all too often overshadowed by Annie Hall. The story is pretty much the same as most of Allen's films. He plays a lusty, bumbling New Yorker seeking love wherever he can find it�a search which lands him with a high schooler and later his best friend's mistress. With Meryl Streep and Diane Keaton.

    2. Small Time Crooks: One of the few recent Woody Allen films worth seeing.
    The story follows one cookie manufacturer from near failure and foreclosure to fortune and fraud: delightful!

    3. Coming to America: Eddie Murphy at his best! Murphy as an African prince arrives in Queens to find a wife and goes undercover as an employee at fast-food restaurant.

    4. Trading Places: Eddie Murphy was so funny once, what happened? Oh, right. Enter: Norbit. Here, Dan Aykroyd and Murphy team up to get back at Aykroyd's boss and stick it to The Man.

    5. Blues Brothers: Another fine moment for Dan Aykroyd. Aykroyd and Jon Belushi, in this musical-comedy quest, come together as Midwestern crooks and reunite their blues band in order to raise the money to save the orphanage where they grew up.

    6. Raising Arizona: An earlier Coen Brothers classic. Nicolas Cage and Holly Hunter steal a baby. Enough said.

    7. Father of the Bride: Steve Martin charmingly grapples with the parental and financial anxieties of seeing his first-born daughter married. With Martin Short as a ambiguously European wedding planner.

    8. The Mask: A Jim Carrey and Cameron Diaz tour de force in which Carrey finds a mysterious mask that transforms him from a lonely goof to a smoking, green-faced stud. And Cameron Diaz looks really hot.

    9. Breaking Away: A young and muscular Dennis Quaid fights to win a cycling competition and break free from his small-town digs.

    10. The Sting: An indispensable Paul Newman and Robert Redford comedy and crime thriller. Set in the 1930s, Newman and Redford play charming crooks who rustle together a masterful get-rich quick scheme.

    Source: Bwog 


 

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