Cineteca Nacional’s Muestra 58: ScreenAnarchy Picks Five Must-See Films
By Eric Ortiz Garcia
In 2015, Mexico City’s Cineteca Nacional will continue to have two Muestras per year. The Muestra Internacional de Cine offers the best of the world’s cinema and it is considered to be the city’s most important film event, aside of the bigger film festivals. And while the programming of the 58th edition of the Muestra is not as attractive as it should have been, it brings several important films for the first time to Mexico City, so I’m highlighting five of them.
Li’l Quinquin (Bruno Dumont, France)
Cahiers du Cinéma chose it as the best film of 2014 and it is widely regarded as the director’s best work yet, though a departure from his earlier works, as it is primarily a comedy. This is the official synopsis: “An improbable, screwball and slapstick police investigation focusing on bizarre crimes on the outskirts of a small town in the north of France that has fallen prey to evil, and to a band of young scoundrels led by Li’l Quinquin and his beloved Eve.”
Moebius (Kim Ki-kuk, South Korea)
Moebius premiered back in 2013 at Venice but only now it is arriving to Mexico City. It was described by our own Pierce Cornan as “a wild and courageous work from Korea's enfant terrible, one of the most powerful experiences of the year.”
Night Moves (Kelly Reichardt, US)
Night Moves premiered in Mexico at last year’s Riviera Maya Film Festival, but it never got proper distribution. Then, the Muestra 58 is going to be chance to watch it on the big screen. Our own Kurt Halfyard said it is a “tense, quiet thriller that would make Arthur Penn proud.”
White God (Kornél Mundruczó, Hungary/Germany/Sweden)
I watched White God back at Morelia and wrote the following: "White God shows the rotten side of humanity, with many different aspects of the (cruel) reality that dogs - and animals in general - have to face every day not just in Budapest, where the movie is set, but in the whole world. The film plays like a revenge fantasy, but it is really clever and never feels gratuitous. Plus, it's definitely a technical masterwork, a very ambitious project that demanded a whole lot of work and deservedly got the Palm Dog Award."
Don’t miss it!
White Shadow (Noaz Deshe, Tanzania/Germany/Italy)
This film looks very unique and interesting, as it is about the real albino problem in Tanzania, where the albinos are killed for their body parts.