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Posts Tagged ‘Tribeca Film Festival

Maegan and I decided that this film, one of the few featuring and created by Puerto Ricans, was one we could share our thoughts on for VL readers. We watched this separately but on the same day. Feel free to share some questions you have about the film and we’ll be happy to respond!

B. The synopsis of the film had me intrigued but wondering if I would be rolling my eyes the entire 15 minutes. It states:

A Puerto Rican saying haunts single women in their 30s: “If such a woman is not married by this time, she must be a slut, a lesbian, or a prude.” This is the story of that woman. Gabi Padilla lives a life of pleasure and independence. But after her mother’s unexpected death, she is forced to return to her rural hometown—a place where Gabi’s sensual flair is not welcome.

Check out the trailer:

M. When I saw the trailer and the tagline I was rolling my eyes and sucking my teeth too. I was like : why do we need another movie with a sassy and sexy Puerto Rican who is a virgin, a whore, or a lesbian (but not all).

B. So, basically, I’m Gabi Padilla, or rather I’m a part of this community of “sluts,” “lesbians,” and “prudes” (oh the labels!) as an unmarried 30-something Puerto Rican woman living a “life of pleasure and independence” and a proud Twitter Puta.

M. I guess I’m Gabi Padilla too and between seeing the trailer and the actual film I had to see who made the movie. Turns out it’s a Puerto Rican young woman so I watched hoping there would be some other message.

B. The ideas of pleasure and independence are built around the physical: Gabi is wearing what makes her feel attractive and what brings attention and is stereotypically feminine (i.e. low cut curve conscious dress with high heels and make-up). Her pleasure is sexual in nature, but we also witness the pleasure she experiences in being desired, popular, and well liked at her job (does she own the club or just works there?).
Her “independence” is connected to a very US definition: leave your family/hometown, build a life for yourself, get all the nice luxury items in your home, make a profit. Essentially it struck me that “independence” in the film is defined as the “American Dream™. I found this odd as someone who has very different and specific ideas of “independence” when I think of the island of Puerto Rico, historical preservation, self-determination and the communities of people living on the island. The definition and execution seemed to focus only on the individual and not the collective.

M. I think this is why I initially thought that the film was about Puerto Ricans but not by Puerto Ricans. Then I thought, well maybe the trailer was to market the film to a U.S. audience. Then i have to recognize that I’m a Puerto Rican woman approaching 35. Maybe younger Puerto Rican women have a different perspective.

B. And then all the things I don’t like about it I really actually enjoy about it. Here we have a Puerto Rican woman over 30 who is living life on her own terms. Who makes a decision and finds peace of mind, happiness and that, to me, is a form of independence and pleasure. If it were not for that last scene, which made the entire film for me, I would have had very different thoughts about this film.

M. Totally and there’s the contradiction that exists in the lives of so many Puerto Rican women. Sometimes in order to be independent – in terms of career and gender expectations we have to leave familial support networks. When Gabi returns to the bar (and home in that closing scene) we see she gets what she needs from her chosen family on her own terms.

B. Some tired stereotypes of women fighting over men and being jealous of one another, essentializing (or stereotyping?) how “sensual” and liberated women move through the world (i.e. sleep naked in bed no matter where they are, are hit on all the time no matter where they go, are always wearing lacy drawls, etc.).

M. I saw the scenes you mention as stereotypical too but I got a sort of guilty pleasure from some of them too based on the language used. The Rican coloquialisms resonated with me and made me laugh to myself. Like how many times can someone say coño? Also while some of the arguing between the sisters could be seen as stereotypical female cattiness, I read it as pent up resentment by the sisters who stayed behind. Sibling rivalry Rican style gets dramatic. Maybe I’m revealing too much about my family disfunction.

B. Gabi struck me as very accommodating with her family. Very much in tune with what was expected of her and also of what she needed to heal and grieve. She holds a child her sister gives her once she enters the home, she greets her grandmother and sisters cordially, does not question her sister’s request for help, does not lash out at her sister’s nastiness, and instead brings them gifts.

M. You know I saw this as Gabi playing this prodigal daughter role. she was absent for her mother’s death and was trying to atone for the “sin” of being a bad daughter/sister. That or she was trying to find her place in a place she doesn’t belong anymore.

B. What about the mourning process? Each person and woman in the film grieves differently. Who is to say who is greiving more than another? How do we find comfort in rituals, as her sisters did who made coffee, food, knew what was expected of them during a wake? How do we think of the lack of comfort Gabi was able to find as she was assigned to go looking for her mother’s lost dog as her sisters prepared food? Gabi’s crying while putting on make-up, her crying at the burial site, all for me, as a Puerto Rican woman who wears make-up on a regular basis, was a telling scene. Finding this comfort in the ritual of applying make up and allowing the make-up to shed/smudge because of tears and reapplying is a showing of strength to me (yes, her being “independent” in other ways is NOT a show of strength to me). Some may view this as her “mask” coming off or her not able to hide behind it, which lots of folks who do not like make-up argue. But make-up is more than that for many folks, especially those who identify with a femme identity, as I imagine Gabi does.

M. Yeah I wondered about this too, how Gabi was being punished by not being allowed to mourn properly. How she was excluded from the ritual of preparing the body, preparing the food for the mourners. She mourned/cried when she was alone – applying and reapplying makeup and at the grave.

B. We heard throughout that Gabi’s mother was wanting her to return home but we don’t know why she wanted that. Was it so that she could see her more often? Was it so that she could have her close by? Or do we think Gabi’s mother really wanted Gabi to sacrifice her happiness for that of her family (or are we given the impression of that by her sisters?).

M. I guess we’ll never know since no indication is given. Hell even Gabi’s grandmother doesn’t reproach her.

B. Of course we are also given the impression that her sisters are jealous of her because of the choices she has made and because of the choices they have made (were they really choices?). An altercation with her sister who lashes out at Gabi leads them to fighting over their mother’s dead body and Gabi makes a good point: tell my mother what kind of slutty daughter she raised.

M. I think the sisters are portrayed as resentful which kind of bothered me because at least one of them was a mother. Is mami’hood something to resent? Does it turn you into the anti-Gabi, not sexual. I was really struck by the line that Gabi’s sister spat at her when they were fighting – about things only entering her chocha – not coming out. Are motherhood and sexuality being played as opposites of each other?

Gabi,directed by Zoé Salicrup Junco, made it’s North American Premiere at this year’s Tribeca Film Festival. It is competing in the Student Short Competition and will be showing Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.

Let us know what you thought of the film.

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“Because we are poor we live working until God will take us.”

-Baltazar Ushca Tenesaca

The Last Ice Merchant follows Baltazar Ushca Tenesaca, a 65 year old indigenous Ecuadorian man who goes to collect ice from the mountains of Chimborazo. A documentary lasting 15 minutes was directed by Sandy Patch. They synopsis of the film states:

For the last five decades, Baltazar Ushca has made a living harvesting glacial ice from the tallest mountain in Ecuador. His brothers, Gregorio and Juan, have long since retired from the mountain. This is a tale of cultural change in a small indigenous community and how three brothers have adapted to it.

Starting out as a family business where Baltazar, his two brothers, and father mined ice, today it is only Baltazar who is doing this work. The youngest brother, Juan, works in construction and Gregorio the middle brother works in a factory that produces ice and he had churns homemade ice cream. Most of Baltazar’s clients are also “mom and pop” shops in the nearby city that purchase his ice to make drinks and other desserts to sell to locals. We see how fascinated the more urban Ecuadorians and youth are in seeing ice wrapped in hay, something that is rare in the city.

Baltazar speaks about missing his community and fellowship that came with the work he was doing of collecting ice. He is the only one who does this work now of the original crews and does this work alone. He hopes his son or grandson will be interested in the work, as of now none are. They discuss this to be connected to the changing times. The youth perspectives are very much ones we hear today: why work so hard in such hard conditions, for such little pay? Is life easier now? Their children think so.

It is Juan who shares that “our culture and the work of our ancestors I don’t want to forget it, I don’t want to lose our culture” when he speaks of children picking up where they may leave off. Baltazar is clear when he dies, ice from Chimborazo will no longer be mined.

The film leaves us with important questions about how culture is connected to the land, modernization, and preservation. Baltazar speaks of how the ice is becoming more scarce and he must climb higher up the mountains to mine, which brings on it’s own forms of additional danger. A few areas in the film that were left unclear: what tribe are Baltazar and his family a part? In what ways can the education found in their community connect to preserving this cultural practice and these artifacts? How does class, indigenous identity, and discrimination result in who desires ice and in what form?

Below is the trailer

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VL At Tribeca Film Festival

8:54 pm By BiancaLaureano · Movies · 4 Comments

26 Mar 2012

The Tribeca Film Festival is coming and we have press passes to cover the festival! There are only a handful of films that really catch my eye and have me excited, so I’m interested in hearing what our readers would like for us to check out. Of course my first goal was to check out the films that feature and are created by Latin@s. The submissions are not as vast/diverse/complicated or feature-length as in the past so lots of options, many of them “shorts.”

Check out the full list of films for this year and let us know in the comments which film(s) you’d like for us to feature and share our impression and perspectives on!

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La Macha Has Salma, Mala Has……

6:00 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · mexico|Movies|New York · 2 Comments

29 Apr 2009

Don’t think Macha is the only one who can do some objectifying.
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Gael Garcia Bernal and Diego Luna are in New York City to see me. Pero first they had to stop at the Tribeca Film Festival for the U.S. premiere of Rudo y Cursi.

Gael can give me his Mexican flu whenever he wants.

Via / Lossip

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tribeca.jpgThe Tribeca Film Festival, which started in 2002 as a vehicle to bring people back to downtown Manhattan post 9-11-01, celebrated it 6th year and closed this past weekend. This year the festival spanned more of the borough of Manhattan than ever before with films, festival, and discussions with the filmmakers and actors. Featured are no less than 26 films with Latino/Hispanic content or filmmakers. These films explore a range of genres from documentaries to drama and highlight well known cinema players and new blood.

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Tribeca Film Festival Goes Latina

10:28 am By Maegan La Mala · Events|Movies|New York City · Comments Off

24 Apr 2006

tribeca.jpgRobert DeNiro’s downtown NYC film festival, the Tribeca Film Festival, is in full swing in this, its 6th year. The festival, featuring the best in new film from all over the globe, would be incomplete, especially in NYC, if it didn’t feature the Latina experience. Rican actress and director Rosie Perez has her first documentary film featured at the festival, Yo Soy Boricua, Pa’Que Tu lo Sepas, which looks at the history of Ricans, including her own familia. The feature length documentary is showing April 28th through May 7th at theatres throughout the city.

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