Cine Pobre Film Festival: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
== History == |
== History == |
||
There are Cine Pobre events in many countries, including Mexico, Panama, Spain, Argentina |
There are Cine Pobre events in many countries, including Mexico, Panama, Spain, Argentina. |
||
When [[Humberto Solas]] founded the Cuban International Low-Budget Film Festival de Cine Pobre in 2003, the choice of [[Gibara]] as the principal venue was quite unexpected. The town is a hefty 800-kilometre trek from [[Havana]] and an hour's drive along poor roads from both [[Holguín]] (which boasts an international airport) and the pristine beaches of [[Guardalavaca]] (home to many all-inclusive resorts). Moreover, Gibara has no hotel and a limited number of private rooms (which are booked up early for Cine Pobre week). Nevertheless, the town was declared a National Monument in 2004. Despite the remoteness, relocating the Festival is unlikely because of the very close relationship that has been built over the years between the festival and the people of Gibara. |
When [[Humberto Solas]] founded the Cuban International Low-Budget Film Festival de Cine Pobre in 2003, the choice of [[Gibara]] as the principal venue was quite unexpected. The town is a hefty 800-kilometre trek from [[Havana]] and an hour's drive along poor roads from both [[Holguín]] (which boasts an international airport) and the pristine beaches of [[Guardalavaca]] (home to many all-inclusive resorts). Moreover, Gibara has no hotel and a limited number of private rooms (which are booked up early for Cine Pobre week). Nevertheless, the town was declared a National Monument in 2004. Despite the remoteness, relocating the Festival is unlikely because of the very close relationship that has been built over the years between the festival and the people of Gibara. |
||
Revision as of 01:28, 25 October 2015
This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2014) |
Cine Pobre is a self-funded filmmaking genre without a set of stylistic criteria nor format boundaries, involving many geographically separated creators with at least two things in common: a strong desire to tell their story and to do so with their own resources.
History
There are Cine Pobre events in many countries, including Mexico, Panama, Spain, Argentina. When Humberto Solas founded the Cuban International Low-Budget Film Festival de Cine Pobre in 2003, the choice of Gibara as the principal venue was quite unexpected. The town is a hefty 800-kilometre trek from Havana and an hour's drive along poor roads from both Holguín (which boasts an international airport) and the pristine beaches of Guardalavaca (home to many all-inclusive resorts). Moreover, Gibara has no hotel and a limited number of private rooms (which are booked up early for Cine Pobre week). Nevertheless, the town was declared a National Monument in 2004. Despite the remoteness, relocating the Festival is unlikely because of the very close relationship that has been built over the years between the festival and the people of Gibara.
Participants
The catalogue contains both quality and diversity. Filmmakers from every continent are represented, from countries with a long-established cinematic tradition (United States, India, Germany, France, Burkina Faso) and others with an emerging industry (Chad, Ecuador, Lebanon, Macedonia, Mauritania). The themes covered are similarly eclectic, including serious, historical, funny and heart-warming looks at love, migration, communication, alienation and engagement. The top prize is 15,000 euros.
Events
As the Manifest of the Event stated, « Low-Budget Cinema » does not mean cinema devoid of ideas or artistic quality. It refers to a type of cinema of restricted economic possibilities, done in less developed countries or in those around them. During the course of the week, there are also a number of concerts, exhibitions, meetings… The International Low-Budget Movie Festival relies on the key support of the Cuban Institute for Movie Art and Industry (ICAIC), the Ministry of Culture of Cuba, the Provincial Government of Holguín Province and the City of Gibara, among other institutions.
Jury
Limited in the number of films which may be shown, the selection committee spends much of the year deciding on the next year's selection. Juries selecting the winning films in each category (Fiction & Documentaries) are well-known artists, critics and film directors.
The 8th International Cuba Low-budget Film Festival opens May, 5, 2010.
7th EDITION – 2009 In 2009, the director of the Festival, Sergio Benvenuto, stated that 266 works were shown, from more than 20 countries. This year, the jury was composed of :
- Gonzalo Fredes
- Xenia Rivery
- Ivan Trujillo Bolio
- Eslinda Nunez
- Marharita Maruregui Fernandez
- Ricardo Benett Santamaria
- Guillermo Monterforte
- Jesus Leon Solana
- Lisette Vila
- Elsa Methol
- Juan Antonio Garcia Borrero
- Marta Nin
The 2009 winners :
- Querida Bamako, by Omer Oke y Txari Llorente. España. – Best Feature-length Film
- Humillados y ofendidos, by Javier Horacio Álvarez, César Brie and Pablo Brie. Bolivia – Best documentary
WINNERS (Best Feature-Length Film & Best Documentary only ) 2003 :
- Last Ball, de Peter Callahan (EE.UU.) - Best Feature-length Film
- Siyamo, de Mahmoud Reza Sani (Iran) – Best documentary
2005 :
- Lichter (Germany) by Hans-Christian Schmid - Best Feature-length Film
- Los Ecos y la Niebla (Cuba) by Rigoberto Jiménez - Best documentary
2006 :
- La ciudad del so (Czech Republic) by Martin Sulik - Best Feature-length Film,
- Soñar en Nablus (Spain), by Sergi Sandúa and Carlos Delfa - Best Documentary
2007 :
- Noticias lejanas de México, by Ricardo Benet - Best Feature-length Film
- Voyage en Sol Majeur (France) - Best Documentary, from France, directed by Georgi Lazarevki
2008 :
- Outlanders (England), by Dominic Lees - Best Feature-length Film
- Under The Ahmadabad Sky (Italy) by Francesca Lignola y Stefano Rebechi - Best Documentary