Argentine director Paula Hernández’s “The Ravaging Wind,” toplined by Latin American star Alfredo Castro (“Karnawal,” “El Membership”), would be the opening evening movie of Horizontes Latinos sidebar on the 71st version of the San Sebastian Movie Competition, which runs Sept. 22-30.
Carolina Markowicz’s “Toll,” whose producers embrace Brazilian large Globo Filmes, will shut the part, one of many greatest examples of San Sebastian’s long-term dedication to Latin American cinema.
In whole, Horizontes will current this yr 12 tales, set in Argentina, Chile, Mexico and Brazil.
Historically, the sidebar showcases function movies not but launched in Spain, both completely or partially produced in Latin America directed by Latino filmmakers or that are set towards the backdrop or topic of Latino communities in the remainder of the world.
The contenders checklist of the 2023 version takes in two movies who walked off with prizes at San Sebastian’s Latin American Work In Progress initiative – Argentine Martín Benchimol’s “The Fort” and Brazilian Guto Parente’s “A Unusual Path”- and one other -“Alemania,” by Argentina’s María Zanetti – which was awarded on the pageant’s 2022 European-Latin America Co-Manufacturing Discussion board.
“A Ravaging Wind” marks the second presence at Horizontes of a movie by Hernández after 2019’s “The Sleepwalkers;” “Toll” represents Markowicz’s return to the part after attending final yr with “Charcoal.”
Additionally returning to Horizontes is Tatiana Huezo, who was included within the retrospective 4+1: Modern Mexican Cinema with “The Tiniest Place” in 2011 and gained the Horizontes Prize in 2021 with “Prayers for the Stolen.”
Born in El Salvador and resident in Mexico, the award-winning filmmaker Huezo is presenting this yr her documentary “Echo,” whose world gross sales rights are dealt with by Mubi’s The Match Manufacturing unit.
The 2023 Horizontes Latinos will host directorial debuts by Camila Fabbri, Dolores Fonzi, Felipe Gálvez and María Zanetti.
All of the movies within the part vie for the Horizontes Award, which carries a money prize of €35,000 ($38,615) for the director of the movie and its distribution in Spain.
Horizontes’ motion pictures that are the primary or second works by their administrators may even compete for the TCM Youth Award, selected by a jury of 150 college students.
2023 Horizontes Latinos Competitors Titles:
“A Ravaging Wind” (“El viento que arrasa,” Paula Hernández, Argentina-Uruguay)
Chilean star Alfredo Castro, Spain’s Sergi López (“Pan’s Labyrinth”) and Almudena González (“Argentina, 1985”) topline the cinematic adaptation of Selva Amada’s admired novel, a story of a preacher and his daughter whose automotive breaks down throughout their newest mission to unfold the gospel. Produced by Cimarrón and Argentina’s Rizoma and Tarea Fina (“Incident Gentle”).
“Toll” (“Pedágio,” Carolina Markowicz, Brazil-Portugal)
A Globo Filmes and Bionica Filmes manufacturing, it follows a freeway toll employee, determined as a result of her son is homosexual and able to do something to alter his situation. Paris-based Luxbox sells.
“Alemania” (María Zanetti, Argentina-Spain)
A co-production by Argentina’s Juan Pablo Miller at Tarea Fina with Madrid-based Solita Movies’ José Alenda, winner of the ArteKino Worldwide Award at San Sebastian’s Europe-Latin America Co-Manufacturing Discussion board in 2021. It focuses on the character of a teen whose household life is racked by her sister’s psychological dysfunction. Meikincine sells.
“Blondi” (Dolores Fonzi, Argentina-Spain-US)
The function debut of Argentina’s Dolores Fonzi, star of Santiago Mitre’s Cannes Critics’ Week winner “Paulina.” A coming of age of a 40-something mom and her son, led by Fonzi, Leonardo Sbaraglia (“The Accused”) and Rita Cortese (“Wild Tales”). Movie Manufacturing unit Leisure sells the movie, licensed by Prime Video for VOD within the U.S. and Latin America.
“Clara Will get Misplaced within the Woods” (“Clara se pierde en el bosque,” Camila Fabbri, Argentina)
Argentine writer-actress Fabbri’s directorial debut, a portrait of a girl confronted with a traumatic prevalence from her previous.
“The Fort” (“El castillo,” Martín Benchimol, Argentina-France-Spain)
Benchimol’s first solo-directing function, a Gema Movies manufacturing picked up by Luxbox, tells the true story of a housekeeper who inherits a fortress in the course of the Argentine pampas from her former employer. A Berlinale’s Panorama premiere.
“The Echo” (“El eco,” Tatiana Huezo, Mexico-Germany)
A Radiola Movies-ZDF co-production, offered by Mubi’s The Match Manufacturing unit, which paperwork life in a distant village in northern Mexico. Finest documentary and director at Berlinale’s Encounters part.
“Heroic” (“Heróico,” David Zonana, Mexico)
A Sundance World Cinema Dramatic and Berlinale Panorama participant, offered by Goodfellas, marking Zonana’s follow-up to San Sebastian 2019’s contender “Workforce.” An anti-military authority drama turning on a teen who enrols in a army academy in search of a greater future.
“Los impactados” (Lucía Puenzo, Argentina)
Fifth movie by Cannes, Berlin and Tribeca competitor Puenzo, now additionally forging a profitable profession as a TV showruuner, as on “La Jauría.” The movie follows the steps of a lightning-strike sufferer, toplining Chilean actress Mariana Di Girolamo, star of Pablo Larrain’s “Ema.”
“The Settlers” (“Los colonos,” Felipe Gálvez, Chile-Argentina-U.Ok.-Taiwan-France-Denmark-Sweden)
How Chile’s South was gained: A 1900 Patagonia-set Western detailing the slaughter of Mapuches, or their incorporation right into a delusion of civilisation. Produced by Chilean Giancarlo Nasi’s Quijote Movies, offered by MK2 Movies, enjoying at Cannes’ Un Sure Regard, successful a Fipresci Prize.
“A Unusual Path” (“Estranho Caminho,” Guto Parente, Brazil)
Arrange at Brazil’s Tardo Filmes, Parente’s tenth function gained the Projeto Paradiso First Prize within the WIP Latam part and was multi-awarded at Tribeca. It follows a filmmaker who reconnects along with his father through the compelled lockdown of the pandemic.
“Totem” (Tótem, Lila Avilés, Mexico)
Avilés, whose function debut “The Chambermaid” screened at San Sebastian’s New Administrators in 2018, tells this time a choral movie about life, specializing in a 7-year-old woman who seems to be on as her household foundations crumble.