Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

Top Latin American films to be showcased during April festival

"The Violin," a 2006 Mexican film directed by Francisco Vargas about humble farmer-musicians who surreptitiously support a homegrown guerrilla movement, is among the films featured in the festival.

“The Violin,” a 2006 Mexican film directed by Francisco Vargas about humble farmer-musicians who surreptitiously support a homegrown guerrilla movement, is among the films featured in the festival.

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – Some of the best new films from Latin America will be screened locally during the second annual Latin American Film Festival April 4-10.

The festival is organized by the University of Ilinois’ Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies with collaboration and support from Boardman’s Art Theater. All screenings will take place at the theater, 126 W. Church St., Champaign. Tickets, priced at the theater’s standard rates, will be available for sale at the box office in advance of each showing.

Films featured this year are “The Violin,” a 2006 Mexican film directed by Francisco Vargas about humble farmer-musicians who surreptitiously support a homegrown guerrilla movement; “Cocalero,” a 2007 documentary on the grassroots campaign of Bolivian president Evo Morales that is the directorial debut of Alejandro Landes; “The Aura,” a 2005 thriller directed by the Argentine filmmaker Fabián Bielinsky, who died in 2006; “Alice’s House,” a 2007 film about domestic drama by Brazilian director Chico Teixeira; and “Madeinusa,” Peruvian director Claudia Llosa’s depiction of how life in a remote mountain suddenly changes with the arrival of an outsider.

“All of the films have been awarded prestigious national and international prizes and have never been shown in commercial movie theaters locally,” said festival coordinator Angelina Cotler, the U. of I. center’s associate director.

Cotler said the festival was designed to appeal not only to university students and faculty and staff members but also to the community – “with the goal of strengthening and disseminating knowledge of the cultural diversity and creativity of the Latin American region.”

“Given the increased importance of the region and the Spanish and Portuguese languages for U.S. society and culture, a film festival of this nature will benefit the community and the university by offering representations and portraits of different cultural, political and social phenomena in Latin America,” Cotler said.

Films will be screened throughout the week on the following rotation:

April 4: “The Violin,” 7:30 p.m.; “Cocalero,” 9:45 p.m.

April 5: “The Aura,” 5 p.m.; “Alice’s House,” 8 p.m.; “Madeinusa,” 10:10 p.m.

April 6: “Cocalero,” 6:30 p.m.; “The Violin,” 8:50 p.m.

April 7: “Alice’s House,” 6:30 p.m.; “Madeinusa,” 8:50 p.m.

April 8, “Madeinusa,” 6 p.m.; “The Aura,” 8:15 p.m.

April 9, “The Violin,” 6:30 p.m., “Cocalero,” 8:45 p.m.

April 10: “The Aura,” 6 p.m.; “Alice’s House, 8:55 p.m.

More information about the festival, including a printable schedule and movie trailers, is available online at http://www.clacs.uiuc.edu/.

Read Next

Humanities Diptych image of Robert Dale Parker and book cover of "The Literature of Extreme Poverty in the Great Depression."

New book shows how literature of extreme poverty provides stirring view of the Great Depression

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The literature of extreme poverty during the Great Depression offered an aesthetic that matched the hopelessness and isolation of the unemployed and those living on the street. Robert Dale Parker, a professor emeritus of English at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, examines what he calls “the poetics of the stiff” — the […]

Behind the scenes Photo of a woman looking at a textile wall hanging in a gallery.

Experiencing the intersection of art, architecture at Krannert Art Museum

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — As an art student at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, I love how different forms of art weave together. No art form exists in isolation; each one connects and interacts with others in meaningful ways. Painting borrows precision from drawing, dance is deeply connected to music, and photography captures the drama of […]

Health and medicine Life sciences Veterinary medicine Two men in a lab. The seated man holds a hologram projection of a brain.

Mutation increases enzyme in mouse brains linked to schizophrenia behaviors

Researchers found a key role for an enzyme regulating glycine in the brain while investigating a rare genetic mutation found in two patients with schizophrenia.

Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

507 E. Green St
MC-426
Champaign, IL 61820

Email: stratcom@illinois.edu

Phone (217) 333-5010