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Ten Latin American films to compete for the Horizontes Award
06August
Events

Ten Latin American films to compete for the Horizontes Award

The 2021 Horizontes Latinos selection will see ten Latin American films directed by moviemakers from Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico, Switzerland, Uruguay and Venezuela gather at the San Sebastian Festival, including five films from the event's Latin American work in progress initiative, three first films and the return to the section of directors Paz Fábrega, Alonso Ruizpalacios and Lorenzo Vigas.

The winner of the WIP Latam Industry Award 2020, Piedra Noche Dusk Stone, by Iván Fund, will compete for the Horizontes Award following its screening in the Venice Festival's Giornate degli Autori section. The Argentine filmmaker, winner of awards at Cannes, BAFICI and Mar del Plata for his previous films, tells the story of a married couple in mourning.

El empleado y el patrón / The Employer and the Employee, winner of the Egeda Platino Industry Award for best WIP Latam 2020, will close the Horizontes selection. Its director, the Uruguayan Manuel Nieto Zas, award winner at Rotterdam and Havana, premiered his third film, starring Nahuel Pérez Biscayart, at the last Directors' Fortnight in Cannes.

Another film from the WIP Latam seedbed, Jesús López, will have its world premiere in San Sebastian and will open the section. The movie by the Argentine director Maximiliano Schonfeld, who presented his earlier productions at the Berlinale, follows the transformation experienced by Abel when his cousin Jesús is killed in a car accident. Jesús López was also selected for Proyecta, the collaboration between Ventana Sur and San Sebastian Festival, in 2018.

Madalena participated in the official competition at Rotterdam after being selected for Films in Progress 36. The first feature film from the Brazilian director Madiano Marcheti tells the story of three characters connected by Madalena's disappearance.

Aurora, the latest film from Paz Fábrega, which was part of the Films in Progress 37 selection with the title of Desasosiego / Restless, also competed in Rotterdam. Aurora will be the Costa Rican director's second participation in Horizontes Latinos, following the selection of her first feature film, Agua fría de mar, in 2010.

Lorenzo Vigas also returns to Horizontes Latinos to present his second film, La caja The Box, which will once again compete for Venice Festival's Golden Lion in September after having landed the same award with his feature film debut, Desde allá / From afar, in 2015. With La caja, the Venezuelan director closes his trilogy on fatherhood, started with the short film Los elefantes nunca olvidan (2004). 

The Mexican director Alonso Ruizpalacios, winner of the Horizontes Award with his debut film, Güeros (2014), returns with Una película de polícias A Cop Movie, a contender for the Golden Bear at the last Berlinale. A Cop Movie won the Silver Bear for Outstanding Artistic Contribution for Yibrán Asuad's editing.

Also coming from the Berlin Festival's (Encounters section), the Festival will programme Azor, a project resulting from San Sebastian Festival's Co-Production Forum in 2016The first feature from the Swiss director Andreas Fontana places two bankers in the context of the Argentine dictatorship and its disappeared.

The Mexican director Tatiana Huezo will present Noche de fuego Prayers for the Stolen, recipient of a special mention from Un Certain Regard at the Festival de Cannes. Noche de fuego is the first fictional feature from Huezo, whose non-fiction film El lugar más pequeño was programmed for the 4+1: Contemporary Mexican cinema retrospective in 2011.    

AmparoSimón Mesa Soto's debut in feature films, part of the Semaine de la Critique selection at the last Festival de Cannes, follows a woman whose son has been recruited by the army. The Colombian director won the Golden Palm for best short film with his graduation short (Leidi, 2014).

The Horizontes Latinos section is one example of San Sebastian Festival's strong links with Latin America. All of the selected feature films, never screened before in Spain, totally or partially produced in Latin America, directed by filmmakers of Latin origin or with Latin communities as their theme or backdrop, compete for the Horizontes award, coming with 35,000 euros for the director of the film and its distributor in Spain.

The Horizontes Latinos Jury is responsible for appraising and deciding the awards for these movies. Films in the Horizontes Section which are also the first or second work by their director similarly compete for the TCM Youth Award, decided by a jury of students between the ages of 18 and 25 years.