Lex Ortega
ScreenAnarchy: You organized the MÉXICO BÁRBARO project. How did the idea emerge?
Lex Ortega: I dare to say it is almost “impossible” to watch short films regularly at movie theater chains. Luckily, shorts are always welcomed at festivals and they have their own space. Unfortunately, their life span is relatively brief and you can only watch them at festivals or special showings.
The idea of making an anthology comes because of that, in order to give a bigger life span to the short film and a larger scale projection.
This won’t be your first work on an anthology (thinking in THE ABCS OF DEATH and BEWARE! BODY COUNT). Classic horror anthologies like CREEPSHOW and BLACK SABBATH, or most recent ones like TRICK ‘R TREAT and V/H/S, are an influence for you?
Creepshow influenced this project very much, but there’s other anthology that definitely put me in the territorial context, which is the vertebral column of México Bárbaro. I’m talking about Three… Extremes, made by several Asian directors (Miike Takashi, Fruit Chan and Chan-wook Park). My perception of that film is that they tell stories in a very local way and I loved that.
Did you manage to reunite all the directors you had in mind since the beginning?
The majority of the initial filmmakers are the ones reunited today, although the original list of possible directors changed a bit because two were busy filming other things and decided to step out of the project for personal reasons. When that happened, we proposed privately their conceivable successors, analyzed their works and made the decision after voting.
I did the selection based on directors I admire. We met at genre festivals and showings, while we were showing our works. Everyone has contributed to the project with amazing stuff and, I think, the most important thing is the great interest they all have. The decision of creating without excuses, just filming and telling stories with nothing stopping us.
Can you tell more about your MÉXICO BÁRBARO segment?
My segment is titled It’s the Inside What Matters (Lo Que Importa Es Lo de Adentro). It is a bizarre, sick and very violent version of what we know as “el Coco” o “el Señor del Costal” (the Hispanic equivalent of the bogeyman). It has an urban setting, very close to any of us who live in the monster of a city that Mexico City is.
I interview recently José Luis Ortega, Mauricio Matamoros and Jorge Grajales (experts and programmers from Mexico). When I asked them about the current genre scene in Mexico, three names standed out: Jorge Michel Grau, Isaac Ezban and yours, Lex Ortega. Thinking in this, what does MÉXICO BÁRBARO means to Mexican genre cinema?
It is a film that shows the world different visions of Mexican traditions and legends but, most importantly, is the context of being a collective and plural project.
We want to expand México Bárbaro like a franchise, to give opportunities to more male and female genre directors from all over Mexico. It won’t matter if their career is long or short. The only requirement is to be Mexican born, though it doesn’t matter their current place of residence.
We also want to open a forum and platform through social networks, where film professionals and suppliers who are interested in horror and fantasy cinema will be able to show and offer their work. A self-management medium to generate projects, offer advice and support exercises done outside the franchise.
That is our main contribution to Mexican genre cinema and what makes México Bárbaro the first film with this characteristics in the country.