The Present and Future Dystopias of Nuevo orden and Medida provisória

2021 ◽  
Vol 75 (1) ◽  
pp. 88-92
Author(s):  
Manuel Betancourt

FQ columnist Manuel Betancourt identifies an uncanny trend in recent Latin American cinema: the depiction of future dystopias that, despite subtle sci-fi touches, feel more than ever like tweaked visions of already harrowing presents. His column focuses on two new films that exemplify the power such a genre holds on the region’s cultural imagination: Michel Franco’s Nuevo orden (New Order, 2020) and Lázaro Ramos’s Medida provisória (Executive Order, 2020). Both films feel much ripped from the headlines, a timely response to years of unrest and decades (if not centuries) of racist governance. Betancourt warns that such speculative attempts should be approached with both caution and optimism. A dystopian film need not function solely as a funhouse mirror but can also be a window into a new paradigm, with sci-fi touches offered as potential tools to illuminate ways to carve newer, better futures.

2021 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 77-92
Author(s):  
Isabel Seguí

Beatriz Palacios’s instrumental role in the Ukamau group has been largely ignored by film historiography and criticism. The authorial persona of her comrade and husband, Jorge Sanjinés, has eclipsed Palacios’s work and ideas. Her erasure is due to the perspectives chosen to analyze Ukamau (male-centered auteurist and formalist approaches) and to the almost exclusive use of the voice of Sanjinés (interviews, essays, and films interpreted in an authorial key) to construct the group’s history. Ignoring the contribution and importance of Palacios’s work and not accounting for her share in the authorship of the films made during the years they lived and worked together impedes a correct understanding of the complexity of the production context and the amplitude of the contribution of Ukamau to Latin American cinema. While her work as a producer is increasingly recognized, delving into her roles as a disseminator of political cinema in alternative circuits, evaluator of the impact of the movies on the popular classes, and documentary director completes the portrait of her all-encompassing life and career. En gran medida, el papel instrumental de Beatriz Palacios en el grupo Ukamau ha sido ignorado por la historiografía y la crítica cinematográficas. La persona autoral de su camarada y esposo, Jorge Sanjinés, ha eclipsado la obra e ideas de Palacios. Dicha eliminación se debe a las perspectivas elegidas para analizar Ukamau (enfoques y formalistas) y al uso casi exclusivo de la voz de Sanjinés (entrevistas, ensayos y películas interpretadas en clave autoral) para construir la historia del grupo. Ignorar la contribución e importancia del trabajo de Palacios, así como su participación en la autoría de las películas realizadas durante los años que vivieron y trabajaron juntos, impide una correcta contribución de Ukamau al cine latinoamericano. Mientras que su trabajo como productora es cada vez más reconocido, ahondar en su labor como divulgadora de cine político en circuitos alternativos, evaluadora del impacto de las películas en las clases populares y directora de documentales, completa debidamente retrato de su vida y carrera.


2012 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul A. Schroeder Rodríguez

2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 108-110
Author(s):  
Andrea Meador Smith

Review of: Domestic Labor in Twenty-First Century Latin American Cinema, Elizabeth Osborne and Sofía Ruiz-Alfaro (eds) (2020) Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan, 242 pp., ISBN 978-3-03033-295-2, h/bk, €103.99, e/bk, €85.59


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document