Panel
Discussion on Film
Children
of the Amazon
In
the 1960s, the Brazilian government began work on the BR- 364,
the highway that would open up the Amazon. Farmers, loggers
and cattle ranchers descended on the tropical forest with devastating
consequences for indigenous people and for the rubber-tappers
who eked out a living from the trees. The Amazon quickly became
Brazil ’s “Wild West,” and
violence became commonplace among the factions competing for
a livelihood. The panelists will examine how the road changed
the forest and local communities and discuss efforts to protect
land and traditions.
Denise
Zmekhol is a film director and producer.
Elenira
Mendes is the daughter of late rainforest
preservation activist Chico Mendes.
Chief
AlmirSurui is a village
chief who has worked to protect Surui lands and culture.
Wednesday,
October 1, 7:00 pm
160
Kroeber Hall
Film screening
Children of the Amazon
Directed by Denise Zmekhol ( United
States, 2008)
“Children of the Amazon” follows Brazilian filmmaker
Denise Zmekhol as she travels deep into the Amazon in search
of the Indigenous Surui and Negarote children she photographed
15 years ago. Part road movie, part time travel, her journey
tells the story of what happened to life in the largest forest
on earth when a road was built straight through its heart.
“Beautifully
filmed and compassionately told, ‘Children
of the Amazon’ deftly uses the director’s relationship
with the children of three Amazonian communities to show the
history of the region as a whole.” — Victoria Langland,
UC Davis
Wednesday, October 22, 7:00 pm
160 Kroeber Hall
Lost
Embrace
Directed
by Daniel Burman (Argentina, 2004)
Directionless
and unsatisfied, Ariel dreams of escaping a life trapped behind
the counter of his mother’s lingerie store
in a shabby Buenos Aires shopping mall. He is angling to move
to Poland , a land of opportunity to him but also the place his
Jewish grandmother fled during World War II. Before he can convince
her to hand over the documents he needs to secure a Polish passport,
his long-lost father arrives on the scene bringing with him the
answers to Ariel’s questions about the past. 100 minutes.
Spanish with English subtitles.
“A film of unexpected, almost indescribable off-center
charm that deepens as it goes on.” — Kenneth Turan,
Los Angeles Times
Wednesday,
November 5, 7:00 pm
Please note new location: 126 Barrows Hall
The Judge and the General
Directed by Elizabeth Farnsworth
and Patricio Lanfranco (United States, 2008)
When
Chilean judge Juan Guzmán was assigned the first
criminal case against the country’s ex-dictator, General
Augusto Pinochet, no one expected much. After all, the conservative
judge had supported Pinochet and believed the general’s
version of events: that the tales of mass murder and systematic
violations of human rights were mostly Communist propaganda and
any excesses committed by the military were the unfortunate consequences
of a dire struggle. The filmmakers trace the judge’s descent
into what he calls “the abyss,” where he uncovers
the past and his own role in the tragedy. 84 minutes.English
and Spanish with subtitles.
Director Elizabeth
Farnsworth will answer questions following
the film.
“See the movie if you get a chance, even just for a break
from the cynicism of everyday life.” — Phil Bronstein,
San Francisco Chronicle
Co-sponsored
with the Human Rights Center .
Monday, December 1, 7:00 pm
Pacific Film Archive Theater
Linha de Passe
Directed by Walter Salles (Brazil, 2008)
In
the heart of São Paulo, one of the toughest, most
chaotic cities in the world, four fatherless brothers struggle
to earn respect and reales without turning to crime. “Linha
De Passe” explores how the brothers — like the vast
majority of young Brazilian men — instead seek refuge in
soccer, religion or familial connections. The title, a Brazilian
soccer term for players passing the ball from one to another
without letting it touch the ground, poetically evokes both the
structure of the film and the boys’ efforts to stay in
the game. 108 minutes. Portuguese with English subtitles.
Walter
Salles, the award-winning director of “Central
Station,” “Midnight,” and “The Motorcycle
Diaries,” will be on hand to discuss “Linha de Passe,” as
well as “On the Road,” an upcoming film currently
in production.
Date: TBD
Location: TBD
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