For the first time ever, Stony Brook University's Hispanic Film Festival dedicates its entire annual program to Cuba, featuring a selection of contemporary films from the island. Organized by Gisele Blain De Dios of the Department of Hispanic Languages and Literature at the University, which is located in Long Island, NY, the presentations and discussions focus on independent film production, and the themes health and education in Cuba.
The festival takes place on April 10, 11, 18, and 20, screening a different film each day. The selected films were produced by filmmakers of a variety of ages and aesthetic styles in the past ten years. The four films on the program are: El acompañante (The Companion) by Pavel Giroud (April 10); La pared de las palabras (The Wall of Words), by Fernando Pérez (April 11); Conducta (Behaviour), by Ernesto Daranas (April 18); and Esteban, by Jonal Cosculluela (April 20). The screenings are presented in partnership with New York-based film Production Company Bach Media, and its founder, Jesús Hernández, who will also be guest speaker at the April 11 screening. Hernández will lecture on the process of independent film production in today's Cuba, using Pérez's La pared de las palabras as a case study; the film is the first independent production directed by Pérez, who is acclaimed as Cuba's most influential living film director.Videos