Mexico:
Ripstein and Hermosillo
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Two of the strongest directors to emerge from Mexico in the 1960s were
Arturo Ripstein and Jaime Humberto Hermosillo. Breaking away from an
earlier cinematic tradition which emphasized folklore and fantasy, Ripstein
and Hermosillo focus instead on social reality-condemning intolerance,
convention and the sexual tyranny of "machismo." The films in this collection
were screened as part of the UCLA Film and Television Archive's series
"The Films of Arturo Ripstein and Jaime Humberto Hermosillo" organized
in collaboration with the Instituto Mexicano de Cinematografia (IMCINE)
and the Cineteca Nacional de Mexico.
Hermosillo often uses the language of melodrama to dissect the values
of the modern Mexican middle class and is one of the first Mexican filmmakers
to deal sympathetically with the issues of homosexuality and gender difference.
Hermosillo's film DONNA HERLINDA AND HER SON accepts the love between
two gay men as normal. THE PASSION ACCORDING TO BERENICE examines a woman's
rebellion. MARY MY DEAREST written in collaboration with Gabriel Garcia
Marquez, is a story of love, fate and magic.
Ripstein, the son of a film producer, began his career in film as a teenager
when he worked as Luis Buñuel's assistant during the filming of
EXTERMINATING ANGEL. He has collaborated with some of Latin America's
most important writers, including Carlos Fuentes and Jose Donoso. Often
set in small towns, Ripstein's films puncture macho posturing and examine
oppressive social conditions and traditions. THE REALM OF FORTUNE, Ripstein's
most acclaimed film, allied to the literary style of magic realism, a
Latin American movement whose most well-known practitioner is Gabriel
Garcia Marquez. With an uncredited Manuel Puig, Ripstein wrote and directed
THE PLACE WITHOUT LIMITS, which examines homophobia in a macho society.
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