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SFC EVENTS / Clandesti: Invisible Catalan Cinema Under Franco

AUDITORIUM, LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA, Ottawa
Festival of New Spanish Cinema | September 1-5, 2010
SIFF CINEMA, Seattle
Festival of New Spanish Cinema  | September 23-26, 2010
KING JUAN CARLOS I OF SPAIN CENTER, NYU, New York
Third Anniversary of Festival of New Spanish Cinema | 28 September - 12 October, 2010
BABYLON, Berlin
Clandesti: Invisible Catalan Cinema Under Franco  | September 29-October 4, 2010
NORTHWEST FILM CENTER, Portland
Festival of New Spanish Cinema | October 8-17, 2010
FESTIVAL DE CINE INTERNACIONAL DE SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico
Festival of New Spanish Cinema | October 13-20, 2010
RICE CINEMA, Houston
Festival of New Spanish Cinema | October 15-18, 2010
MIAMI INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL, Miami
Festival of New Spanish Cinema | October 22-28, 2010
GENE SISKEL FILM CENTER, Chicago
Festival of New Spanish Cinema | November 5th - December 2nd
AFI SILVER THEATRE AND CULTURAL CENTER, Washington D.C.
Festival of New Spanish Cinema | November 11-28 2010
PLAZA THEATRE, Calgary
Festival of New Spanish Cinema | November 18-22, 2010
BFI SOUTHBANK, London
Clandesti: Invisible Catalan Cinema Under Franco  | November 26-30, 2010
ISTANBUL MODERN, Istanbul
Clandesti: Invisible Catalan Cinema Under Franco | June 24-27, 2010
THE DEUTSCHE KINEMATHEK, Berlin
Dangerous cinema? Movies in conflict with the law, money and society | June 11-12, 2010
ANTI-DOCS FROM SPAIN
A showcase of Punto de Vista Festival | July 16th, 2010

Clandestí: Invisible Catalan Cinema Under Franco

focuses on a generation of independent filmmakers whose innate unwillingness to conform forced them to produce, distribute, and exhibit radical films in Catalonia, with the furtive hope of sending them into the rest of Franco’s Spain. Shooting under the pretense of amateur filmmaking, they hid within crowds of protesters, producing works that were often highly creative and even experimental. They used short ends—bits of unexposed footage left over from shoots—made available to them by sympathetic professionals and distributed their films in recreation centers, private homes, cinema clubs, universities, social and cultural associations, and even parochial schools.

 

Being clandestine required these artists to develop aliases, which has led to some difficulties for historical investigation and film preservation. Many of these films have no credits, in order to protect the identities of its participants. While this body of work represents a margin of Spanish film history, it nevertheless contains some of the most crucial, first-hand documents of the end of the dictatorship, revealing problems of housing and social services, immigration, the fate of political prisoners, and restrictions on expression and free speech. These filmmakers, members of a generation born after the Civil War, also chronicled the ongoing psychological, social, economic, and cultural effects of the conflict. Forced to choose between exile and intellectual annihilation, they instead expressed themselves, putting their art in the service of a political movement that altered the course of Spanish history. 

DISCUSSION: INVISIBLE CINEMA UNDER FRANCO
Panel Discussion: With the participation of filmmakers Mariano Lisa, co-director of Field for Men, and Manuel Barrios, director of the multiwarded documentary Crònica d’una mirada: Clandestine Filmmaking in Franco’s Spain, 1960-1975. Presented by Marta Sanchez (curator).

To read about Crònica d’una mirada  CLICK .


Most of these films will be shown in digital formats, due to the difficulties of preserving them on their original formats.

ISTANBUL MODERN, Istanbul
Clandestí: Invisible Catalan Cinema Under Franco
(Gizli: Franco Ispanyasi’ndan Kaçak Filmler)

DATE:
June 24-27, 2010

PROGRAM I
Thursday June 24:
1:00 p.m. Happy Parallel
1:45 p.m. Far from the Trees
3:30 p.m. Field for Men
Q&A with director Mariano Lisa after the screening
4:30 p.m. El Sopar


5:30 p.m. Discussion: Invisible Cinema Under Franco
With filmmakers Manuel Barrios and Mariano Lisa, and independent curator Marta Sánchez.

PROGRAM II
Friday June 25:
1:00 p.m. …and then none will laugh
1:30 p.m. Sexperiencias
3:15 p.m. 52 Sundays
4:00 p.m. Long Journey to Rage
4:30 p.m. Lock Out

PROGRAM III
Saturday June 26:
1:00 p.m. Lock Out
3:30 p.m. Protest February 1/8 1976
3:45 p.m. Mountain
4:00 p.m. El Sopar


PROGRAM IV
Sunday June 27:
1:00 p.m. …and then none will laugh
1:30 p.m. Sexperiencias
3:30 p.m. Happy Parallel
4:15 p.m. Far from the Trees

 
LOCK OUT | Antoni Padros | Spain | 127 min. | 1973

Only recently restored, Padrós creates a nightmarish, allegorical world peopled by politically and sexually unsatisfied characters that hover between lethargy and revolution. One of the most fascinating personalities in Spanish cinema, Padros worked as a bank clerk by day while creating this desperate cry for freedom secretly at night. We hope that Antoni Padros will be with us for this rare screening of his film.

For more information CLICK

 
HAPPY PARALLEL El Alegre Paralelo | Enric Ripoll i Freixes, Josep Maria Ramon | Spain | 32 min. | 1964

A revealing look at one of Barcelona’s more notorious neighborhoods, “El Paralelo,” known for its prostitution and torrid nightlife even during the Franco era.

For more information and film clip CLICK

 
EL SOPAR | Pere Portabella | Spain | 50 min. | 1974

In 1974, on the night that militant anarchist Salvador Puig Antich was executed, five former political prisoners – Angel Abad, Jordi Cunill, Lola Ferreira, Narcís Julian, and Antonio Marín – gather in a farmhouse to prepare a meal and appear in a movie on the problems and issues arising from long prison sentences. A pillar of Spanish independent cinema, veteran avant-garde artist Portabella surprises with this highly intimate and moving political classic about the political struggle within prisons.

For more information CLICK

 
FAR FROM THE TREES Lejos de los Árboles | Jacinto Esteva-Grew | Spain | 103 min. | 1963-7

One of the landmarks of Spanish cinema in the Sixties, Far from the Trees is a kind of “updating” of Bunuel’s classic Land Without Bread that focuses on the pervasive presence of popular traditions involving pain and death. Shot on weekends over 7 years, the film was a conscious protest against the then-fashionable image of Spain promoted by the regime of a rapidly modernizing nation. Restored 35mm print; Warning: the film contains scenes of animal abuse.

For more information CLICK

 
...AND THEN NONE WILL LAUGH …i després ningú no riurà | Manel Esteban | Spain | 16 min. | 1968

Capturing the spirit of revolt that spread throughout the world in 1968, Esteva takes his critique beyond the regime to a more acidic rendering of Spain’s Catholic, bourgeois culture. 

For more information and film clip CLICK

 
SEXPERIENCIAS | Jose Maria Nunes | Spain | 94 min. | 1968

A charter member of the avant-garde “Barcelona School,” Nunes charts the reactions of an elderly man and a young girl living in a sheltered Spain at the news of the international groundswell of protests that characterized the late Sixties. The film features an extraordinarily complex sound track that alternates asynchronous sequences with seemingly random sounds of waves, steps, and cars. U.S. Premiere

For more information and film clip CLICK

 
FIELD FOR MEN El Campo para el Hombre | Class Film Collective (Helena Lumbreras, Mariano Lisa) | Spain | 49 min. | 1973

A key work by the only female directors active in the clandestine cinema movement, Field for Men explores rural poverty, highlighting both the difference and the similarities experienced in two very different regions, Galicia and Andalucia.

For more information CLICK

 
LONG JOURNEY TO RAGE Viaje Largo hacia la Ira | Llorenc Soler | Spain | 26 min. | 1969

The underside of the “Spanish miracle.” Crowds of men and women, leaving the countryside and entrusting their fates to the city.

For more information and film clip CLICK

 
52 SUNDAYS 52 Domingos | Llorenc Soler | Spain | 29 min. | 1966

One of the finest works on the world of Spanish bullfighting, 52 Sundays chronicles the misadventures of a group of young men trying to become toreros (bullfighters). Soler captures the hopes and dreams of a class feeling it has fewer and fewer options to get by.

For more inormation and film clip CLICK

 
PROTEST FEBRUARY 1/8 1976 Manifestacions 1/8 Febrer 1976 | Anonymous | Spain | 13 min. | 1976

Raw, incredibly immediate images of the widespread protests in favor of amnesty for political prisoners in 1975. A rare document of the popular nature of protests, these anonymously authored images are juxtaposed by comments culled from police radio messages.

For more information CLICK

 
MOUNTAIN Muntanya | Anonymous | Spain | 10 min. | 1970

A document chronicling the sit-in protest by a group of artists and intellectuals in the Monastery of Montserrat against the trial of ETA militants held in Burgos in December 1970. 

For more information CLICK

 
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