Winter 2008 Archive

Trailer
Wed, March 5, 7pm, 1322 Storer Made in L.A.Documentary Film Q&A
with filmmakers Almudena Carracedo and Robert Bahar

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About 150 people came to the viewing of the documentary film.
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Robert Bahar, Almudena Carracedo, Profesor Almerindo Ojeda and two representatives from SPEAK inform the audience about different organizations on campus such as HIA, CSHR and SPEAK.
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Robert Bahar and Almudena Carracedo answer questions after the viewing.
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More than 100 people stayed for the Q&A after the viewing.
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Jan-March, 8am-5pm SSH 5th floor
Photo ExhibitionNatalia Deeb Sossa, Sociology
Yuyanapaq: To Remember Reception and Director's Talk, Tuesday, February 12

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Christina Siracusa, Program Coordinator
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Cristián Castro and HIA Director Charles Walker discuss details about some photographs.
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UCD Professor Yvette Flores studies the pictures to plan a tour for her class.
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Visitors study the pictures that depict violence in metropolitan areas. |
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Norwegian visiting scholar Astrid Bredholt Stensrud visited the exhibit.
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Kim Davis examines one of the photographs.
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| HIA Director provides context on the origins of the photographic exhibit. |
Many visitors attended lecture and reception.
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Fri, Jan 18, 12-1pm SSH 5214 Brown Bag Series - flyer
Silvana de Paula, Sociology Institute for Research of the State of Rio de Janeiro
The Migration that Speaks Portuguese in California Fieldwork Notes
Mon, Jan 14, 12-1pm Voorhies 126

Americas' Issues Series- Book presentations
Bettina Ng'weno (African American and African Studies) Turf Wars: Territory and Citizenship in the Contemporary State Julie Sze (American Studies) Noxious New York: The Racial Politics of Urban Health and Environmental Justice Zoila Mendoza (Native American Studies) Creating Our Own: Folklore, Performance, and Identity in Cuzco, Peru
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and from Dissertation to Book"
Wed, Feb 13, noon SSH 5214
Natalia Deeb Sossa, Sociology
”Difficulties Accessing: Sexual and Reproductive Health in North Carolina: Latinas’ Stories and Photographs"
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FRIDAYS at 7pm, 1322 STORER FREE ADMISSION, ENGLISH SUBTITLES
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Friday, Jan 18, 7pm O ANO EM QUE MEUS PAÍS SAÍRAM DE FÉRIAS (Brazil) (The Year my Parents Went on Vacation)
In 1970, near the World Cup for Soccer, Daniel Stern
and his wife Miriam leave Belo
Horizonte in a hurry with their ten years old son
Mauro in their Volkswagen. While traveling to São Paulo, the couple explains to Mauro that
they will travel on vacation and will leave Mauro with his grandfather Mótel.
Daniel promises to return before the first game of the Brazilian National
Soccer Team in the Cup. The boy is left in Bom Retiro, a Jewish and Italian
neighborhood, and waits for Mótel in front of his apartment. When the next door neighbor Shlomo arrives, he tells the
boy that Mótel had just had a heart attack and died. Alone and without knowing
where his parents are, the boy is lodged by Shlomo and the Jewish community.
Through the young neighbor Hanna, Mauro makes new friends, cheers for the
Brazilian team and sees the movement of the police and military forces on the
streets while waiting for his parents.
Trailer
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Friday, Jan 25, 7pm EL VIAJE DE CAROL (Spain) (Carol’s Journey)
Carol,
a twelve-year-old Spanish-American girl
from New York, travels with her mother to Spain in the
spring of 1938, at the height of the Spanish Civil War. Separated from
her beloved father, Carol
arrives in her mother's home village and transforms the secretive
family
environment. Her innocence and
rebellious nature drive her at first to reject a world that is at once
new and foreign. But she soon journeys into adulthood through a
friendship with Maruja, the village teacher, and a young local boy,
Tomiche.
Written by Film Movement
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Friday, Feb 1, 7pm VIVA CUBA (Cuba) (Long Live Cuba)
Written and
directed by the internationally acclaimed screenwriter and director Juan Carlos
Cremata Malberti, this award-winning film explores the bond of friendship, as
the close relationship between Malú and Jorge, two children living in Cuba
is threatened by the class differences between their families. The young cast (Malú Tarrau Broche y Jorge
Miló Ávila) portrays the vivid and blunt language of children and the intensity
of drama in social differences.
Trailer
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Friday, Feb 8 25 WATTS (Uruguay)
One neighborhood.
Three kids. Twenty four hours.
25 Watts
is
about three young boys, Leche, Javi and Seba, who live in the urban
Uruguayan city
of Montevideo. All three live different lives with different problems
dealing with money, school, girls and family; however, they manage to
spend
time with each other and move around the neighborhood that knows them
very well. This urban movie shot in black and white portrays
the lives of young Uruguayan men who spend most of their day drinking,
sleeping
with girls and meeting diverse people in the streets: a crazy delivery
boy, a mentally challenged
person, a drug addict and a philosophic video renter. The 90-minute
movie condenses 24 hours of their
lives.
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Friday, Feb 15, 7pm QUASE DOIS IRMÃOS (Brasil) (Almost Two Brothers)
Paulo Lins, writer of Cidade de Deus (City of God),
collaborates with movie director Lúcia Murat in a movie about Miguel and Jorge,
who have a common background and share a unique childhood friendship. Miguel is a senator who faces political
enemies. Miguel ends up in prison in the
70s and he meets his childhood friend Jorge who became a major drug-dealer. Miguel was there for political reasons, and
Jorge, as a common criminal. Though both belong to opposite
social classes they grow to be friends with very different lives. This movie explores many themes such as
friendship, politics, social differences, the Brazilian judicial system, etc. This award winning drama combines fictional drama
and history, immersed in the reality of Brazilian political turmoil in the 70s.
Trailer
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CANCELLED Friday, Feb 22, 7pm JUDIOS EN EL ESPACIO (O POR QUÉ ES DIFERENTE ESTA NOCHE A LAS DEMÁS NOCHES) (Argentina) (Jews in Space or Why Is this Night Different from All Other Nights?)
This edgy comedy from
Argentina
focuses on the crazed members of a Jewish family, reuniting to celebrate
Passover amid dizzying personal crisis. The
director is avid in portraying the traditional Jewish rituals in an Argentine family.
This movie invites viewers to celebrate
the diversity in Argentina
and view the life of a boy who is raised in a family united by religion and
culture.
Trailer
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NEW FILM Friday, Feb 22, 7pm ABRAZO PARTIDO (Argentina) (Lost Embrace)
This is Ariel's world: the small, slightly seedy shopping center in
downtown Buenos Aires, where the Italian shopkeepers scream all day,
the Koreans sell feng-shui and old Osvaldo sells nothing. Where Ariel's
mother runs a lingerie shop and his brother deals in import-export.
It's a comfortable little world, in spite of an undercurrent of malaise
and uncertainty. Many young people are searching for their immigrant
roots to obtain a coveted foreign passport, the key to a world full of
promise. Ariel, however, wants more than a passport from Poland, where
his grandparents fled to escape the Holocaust. He wants to understand.
Why his father left his family shortly after his birth to fight a war
in Israel. Why he never returned. And why this seems to leave his
mother and brother indifferent...But the truth changes. And when
Ariel's father returns, he brings with him new truths, a new story and,
ultimately, a long-overdue embrace--one that had been lost for so long.
Written by
Sujit R. Varma
Trailer
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Friday, Feb 29, 7pm PADRE NUESTRO (Chile) (Our Father)
Padre
Nuestro is an award winning Chilean movie about a dying man
who decides to embark on a trip with his family. He wants to revive some past memories and he
wants to deal with family problems that were not confronted in years. This comedy-drama has an excellent cast, including
the famous Argentinean actress Cecilia Roth and Jaime Vadell (who won a well
deserved the Golden India Catalina Award and the Valdivia Award for this role). The story explores family problems filled
with intense dialogues, emotional swings, and repressed bitterness. Family drama entangles with situational irony,
mixing drama and comedy. |
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Friday, Mar 7, 7pm EL VIOLÍN (Mexico) (The Violin)
Mexican writer-director Francisco Vargas settles
into the sweet, beautifully crafted story of an old man and his violin. The violin belongs to a farmer named
Plutarco, who joins his son and grandson as traveling musicians. Plutarco has a
secret life: He uses his fields to hide ammunition for the guerrillas who are
fighting an oppressive government. When troops bar him from his land, Plutarco
strikes up a friendship with the army commander (Dagoberto Gama). This soldier
may be brutal, but he appreciates Plutarco's soothing music. Don Angel Tavira, an octogenarian making his
screen debut, gives a memorable performance as the grizzled Plutarco (he won a
best-actor prize at 2006 Cannes).
He is a lifelong musician, despite losing a hand in an accident when he was 13.
Tavira's acting is the high point
of this suspenseful yet beautiful movie, which - for a while at least - proves
that music can soothe the savage breast.
Trailer
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