Friday, January 25, 2019

Roma: Anarchy and Repression in an Epic B&W Mexican Drama

By Jose Alberto Hermosillo
“Roma” Anarchy and Repression in an Epic B&W Mexican Drama- Festival in LA ©2019 Netflix

“Roma” is a film of extraordinary beauty and endless poetry, featuring a powerful humanistic and sociological perspective along with subtle political implications.

 

This exceptional black-and-white Mexican drama gains universal appeal as we delve into its emotional depths beneath the compelling story that could happen to anyone, anywhere in the world.

 

Alfonso Cuarón’s childhood memories focus on the importance of “place” and “time,” two of the most definitive elements for understanding the true meaning of “Roma.”

 

In “Roma,” women are depicted as brave, fearless, and lonely. They look out for themselves, support each other, and care for their children. Men are portrayed as irresponsible, with infidelities, irresponsibility, and constant machismo pushing themselves out of the picture.


Roma is being screened at the Academy by Netflix. Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA

The main character of “Roma” is Cleo, played by Yalitza Aparicio, delivering a remarkable and fearless performance.


She is the nanny for four kids: a little girl and three young boys, including Alfonso, the stubborn middle child. The youngest is Carlos, a boy with a vivid imagination.


Cleo has an affair with Fermín (Jorge Antonio Guerrero). He and hundreds of other young trainees are counter-fighters trained by an American CIA agent and a Korean instructor, who are hired to violently suppress leftist students protesting.


What “Roma” doesn’t tell you is that in 1971, right after the Olympic Games Mexico 68 and the 1970 Soccer World Cup, Mexico City was on the verge of economic and political chaos. The protesters in the film are portrayed as “victims” of the circumstances. Yet, these so-called victims were also contributing to the chaos by breaking the law—beating up business owners, patrons, and workers—stealing, looting, graffiti-ing, and harming innocent people.


Moreover, these actions by the students don’t justify the government’s killing of over a hundred people during the “Corpus Christi Massacre,” depicted in the film, when Cleo and the grandmother enter a furniture store to buy a cradle for the baby.


“Roma” attempts to portray Mexican history accurately, but it fails to present both sides of the “tortilla.”


Alfonso Cuarón’s personal political agenda subtly accuses and points fingers through symbolism.


The propaganda elements set the right mood for the film. Still, even these are open to interpretation, and many witnesses of those chaotic times may perceive the events differently.


Most of Cuarón’s films are set within specific time frames. For example, “Gravity” takes place during one orbit of a shuttle around Earth, while “Roma” unfolds over nine months of Cleo’s pregnancy.

 

At the start of this essay, we discussed the importance of “place,” not just as a physical location but as a transitional space where events happen.


In “Colonia Roma,” people pass by without stopping. Their destination might be the Zócalo, but we’re not meant to know for sure. That’s why the framing of the film is intentionally narrow.


Alfonso Cuarón working in Roma behind the scenes, ©2019 Netflix.


The cinematography of “Roma” is stunning, and Cuarón handled the camera work with great care. Beyond its beauty and emotional depth, the film also conveys other stories through its rich symbolism.

 

The bright black-and-white visuals evoke the Golden Age of Mexican cinema.

 

Recreating 1971 Mexico City was difficult due to the area’s history of being damaged by two major earthquakes.

 

Production designer and Oscar© winner Eugenio Caballero (“Pan’s Labyrinth,” “A Monster Calls”) also grew up in Cuarón’s neighborhood. The extensive pre-production process involved detailed research to accurately portray the specific political moments depicted in the story.


Yalitza Aparicio as Cleo in Roma ©2019 Netflix

It is fascinating to spot scenes referencing films by Guillermo del Toro, Alejandro G. Iñárritu, and Cuarón himself, often called “The Three Amigos.” 


For example, the extended scene where Cleo enters the sea to rescue little Sofi resembles the moment when Maribel Verdú goes into the water in “Y tu mamá también.


Another example is the European man inside the costume at the party in the woods; it’s a tribute to “Pan’s Labyrinth.”

 

Finally, the dog “El Borras” escaping the house references “Amores Perros.


These fun-to-watch moments are easy to recognize because of their perfect recreation and camera work, driven by Cuarón’s energetic eye.


Roma behind the scenes ©2019 Netflix


This semi-autobiographical film set in the 1970s draws influence from the Italian Neorealism period. The black-and-white epic features no musical score, and the songs are incidental, coming from the radio or TV. These songs influence the characters’ moods.

 The sound design is a vital part of the film. These sounds enhance the climactic moments with a hyper-realistic effect and a lively sensation of experiencing the events, such as the earthquake and ocean waves, connecting them with nature.

Roma’s real family members and the actors who played them. www.festivalinla.com


Roma’s casting directors searched carefully to find people who looked and felt like the original family.


They traveled all the way to Tlaxiaco in the southern state of Oaxaca to find the lead actress, Yalitza Aparicio, who was a simple kindergarten teacher at the time.


Yalitza Aparicio, Kindergarten Teacher. Festival in LA.

Yalitza said, “It was a real-life experience to work with Alfonso Cuarón.” She was also fortunate to meet Cuarón’s honest nanny, Libo. Before filming started, the two women passionately discussed their roots. Both came from indigenous, marginalized communities.

 

“Libo is a woman with a big heart,” Yalitza said. “I wanted to honor her life with my performance, for Libo gave her work and heart to the Cuarón family.”

 

In the most awarded film of the year, the audience cares about every character without sugar-coating their emotions.

 

The film includes elements of magic realism. The famous Professor Zovek, an actor called Latin Lover, standing on one leg, provides moments of humor.


Latin Lover as Professor Zovek in Roma ©2019 Netflix

For the director, “Roma” is a corridor full of memories. Cuarón wanted to keep it accurate, so he didn’t give the entire script to any actors or crew members. He wanted realistic reactions and for the actors to focus on the family’s journey spontaneously.


Roma behind the scenes ©2019 Netflix

The Academy® Award-winning director stated, “The events depicted in ‘Roma’ have consequences in today’s society, where hate and exclusion expose the vulnerability of the human race.”


The Golden Lion winner also reminds us, “When we watch a movie, viewers share the same experience; they open their senses and connect with the story. It is part of human nature.” He added, “The variety of colors reflects the richness of our society.”


For many critics, including myself, “Roma” is the best movie of the year, not only because of its visual beauty but also because of how it makes us feel.


“Roma” is a significant achievement for all the talented people involved in its making and for Alfonso Cuarón, who rightly earns his place among the most visionary directors of contemporary cinema.

Ben is Back: So is Julia Roberts - Fighting for Her Son in America's Opium Crisis

By José Alberto Hermosillo
Ben is Back, poster courtesy of Roadside Attractions ©2018.

“Ben is Back,” a heartfelt movie that humanizes the drug-addiction crisis in America and the struggle families have -  genuinely revealing.

A drug-addict teen named Ben, terrifically played by Lucas Hedges (“Boy Erased,” “Lady Bird”), unexpectedly shows up to join his family for Christmas. His young sister Ivy (Kathryn Newton) is in a defensive mood - she knows he will cause trouble even though he is again out of rehab.

Ben is Back, poster. Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA

The mother, Holly Burns, Julia Roberts, will stand by her son no matter what.

Ben unintentionally places his family in danger because of his previous debts. He wants to set the record straight but denies that the temptation is more significant than his will.
Peter Hedges, writer/director
Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA

We had an engaging conversation with the writer/director Peter Hedges at the LA Film School. He discussed with many aspirant writers and filmmakers the importance of finding that story you love because if you dig into it, there is something underneath worth telling.

When Hedges’ mother died of cancer, he was inspired to write “Pieces of April,” his first feature. At that time, Mr. Hedges wrote a story about one of the most significant people in his life. This passion was entirely about his project, his dream, and his mother.

Ben is Back, still courtesy of Roadside Attractions ©2018.

In this Mr. Hedges’ fourth feature, he wanted to stop people from dying of O.D. in America. “Ben is Back” is a remarkable film that promotes a significant change in our society. 

Mr. Hedges’ goal was to make a movie that could reach as many people as possible and create consciousness about the invisible danger of killing our youth.

In his own words, “Drug is a faceless antagonist.”

Working with Julia and his son Lucas was a thrill for the director. 

It was easy to get Julia Roberts on board. Great actresses want to play great characters.

In this emotional, character-driven roller-coaster, Ben’s previous lifestyle drives him back to the drug dealers. Unknowingly, he endangers his family. The mother’s unbreakable bond won’t let her son go stoically.

Other contemporary films addressing the drug epidemic in America are “Beautiful Boy,” with the outstanding performances of Timothée Chalamet and Steve Carrell. “Winter’s Bone,” directed by Debra Granik with Jennifer Lawrence, is a movie that goes straight to drug production, distribution, and the violent burning in our society. 

Those films show how addiction is not fun anymore. The situation is worsening every day - and the authorities don’t do enough to prevent, treat, and rehabilitate people in desperate need, mostly the young. 

Julia Roberts hasn’t been that remarkable since “Erin Brockovich.” Young actor Lucas Hedges is passionate about his craft.

Without Oscar's pedigree, “Ben is Back” is an essential film to open up the conversation about illegal drugs in America. 

Besides the dangers of the drug dealing experience, the insightful film emphasizes the importance of family integration and inclusion as part of the drug-addiction patients’ treatment to overcome the obscure scourge in our modern-day society.


Film critic Jose Hermosillo, writer/director Peter Hedges ©2019 Festival in LA

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Thursday, January 24, 2019

Emmanuel Lubezki Shoots the Vanity Fair "Diversity" Cover and Makes History in Hollywood in 2019

By José Alberto Hermosillo
Hollywood Vanity Fair Cover ©2019 Vanity Fair

It took decades for Vanity Fair to have a “Diversity” Cover like this and make history in Hollywood - a fanciful effort made up by the new faces of young and talented people working in Hollywood and around the World.

The work of the great Mexican cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki is magic, pure gold. Congratulations on this excellent work of art.

Hollywood Vanity Fair Cover ©2019 Vanity Fair

The diverse talent in front of the camera is integrated by:

Yalitza Aparicio, “Roma.”
Chadwick Boseman, “Black Panther.”
Timothée Chalamet, “Beautiful Boy.”
Elizabeth Debicki, “Widows.”
Henry Golding, “Crazy Rich Asians.”
Nicholas Hoult, “The Favorite.”
Regina King, “If Beale Street Could Talk.”
Rami Malek, “Bohemian Rhapsody.”
Saoirse Ronan, “Mary Queen of Scots.”
Tessa Thompson, “Sorry to Bother You.”
John David Washington, “BlacKkKlansman.”

It is always fascinating to know a little more about the lives of the stars. 

Starting with the new Superhero Chadwick Boseman from “Black Panther.” He was a terrific basketball player and graduated from Howard University in Washington D.C. Destiny got him close to Denzel Washington, who paid his tuition at the British American Dramatic Academy at Oxford University in London.

The star of “Roma,” Yalitza Aparicio, was a kindergarten teacher when she got the part while accompanying her pregnant sister to the auditions in her hometown in Tlaxiaco, Oaxaca, Mexico. Aparicio’s natural performance earned her a surprising Best Actress Oscar nomination.

The story of Henry Golding is fascinating as well. He was born in Betong, Sarawak, Malaysia, and went to Surrey, England, at age eight. He returned to Kuala Lumpur, where he started his acting career as a host of a top-notch travel TV show. Then he got cast to play this multi-millionaire in the box-office smash “Crazy Rich Asians.”

Often, Vanity Fair has photoshoots of models from different backgrounds. In this Hollywood historical issue, the fashion-forward magazine had a diverse group of Oscar-nominated actors and Golden Globe winners in front of the lenses of one of the best photographers in the World.

The 25th Hollywood Issue - Moving Pictures was photographed by three-time Oscar winner Emmanuel ‘Chivo’ Lubezki and styled by Samira Nasr.

For more on those shining stars, visit: 

The Hollywood Cover - Moving Pictures

The 2019 Vanity Fair Hollywood Issue Cover

 

Behind the Scenes of Vanity Fair’s 2019 Hollywood Issue Cover Shoot

Emmanuel Lubezki, director of photography. Eight times Oscar-nominee and three times Oscar-Winner, Best Cinematography. His outstanding work includes #Gravity #Birdman #TheRevenant. A Little Princess, Sleepy Hollow, A New World. Children of Men, The Tree of Life, Knight of Cups, Like Water for Chocolate, Ambar, Bandidos, Miroslava, Sólo con tu Pareja, Y tu mamá también, Meet Joe Black, A Walk in the Clouds, The Bird Cage,  Reality Bites, Alí, Burn After Reading. Things You Can Tell Just by Looking At Her, Great Expectations.
Film critic José Alberto Hermosillo ©2019 www.FestivalinLA.com
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“Roma” An Unprecedented Best Picture Nomination for a Movie in Spanish
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Friday, January 18, 2019

PINK-SLIPPED: WHAT HAPPENED TO WOMEN IN THE SILENT FILM INDUSTRY

Pink-Slipped Lecture. Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA
January 17, 2019. The Film Scholars Lecture Series took place at the Academy with "Pink Slipped: What Happened to Women in the Silent Film Industries" at the Linwood Dunn Theater in the heart of Hollywood, California.
Pink-Slipped Program. Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA
In the lecture, we saw some great short films of groundbreaking female filmmakers during the silent film era and questions why that representation faded over the century.

Professor Gaines discussed some magnificent silent shorts, including
Camille. Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA
The Girl Spy Before Vicksburg (1910),
The New Love and the Old (1912),
The Diver (1913),
The Roads That Should Lead Home (1913),
Fedora (1916).
Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA
 Jane M. Gaines. Academy Film Scholar. Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA

Jane M. Gaines is a professor of film at Columbia University and Professor Emerita of Literature and English at Duke University. 
Pink-Slipped Book by Jane M. Gaines. Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA
The title of some of her books: “Contested Culture: The Image, the Voice, and the Law” and “Fire and Desire: Mixed-Race Movies in the Silent Era.

She is the recipient of an Academy Film Scholars' grant for “Pink-Slipped: What Happened to Women in the Silent Film Industries?”
 
I firmly believe that the professor’s studies should include a section about the production of films by women in other countries. 
Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA
We still need to know why, in other countries, the gender gap is not so notorious as it is in Hollywood. France, Germany, Spain, Mexico, and Argentina have a significant number of compelling women directors. while in the United States they have to work harder to get represented in the white-male-dominated film industry.
Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA
Academy Reception. Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA
Academy Reception. Photo Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA

Film critic Jose Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA


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