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[Commlist] Tecmerin: Journal of Audiovisual Essays issue 12 published, special issue “Urban Spaces and Cinema. Ibero-American Cities in the Audiovisual Field”

Fri Dec 08 08:34:15 GMT 2023


Tecmerin: Journal of Audiovisual Essays issue 12
Special Issue “Urban Spaces and Cinema. Ibero-American Cities in the Audiovisual Field”
Coordinators: Luis Deltell Escolar y Nadia McGowan
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/portada-revista/?lang=en


The exponential development of urban life compared to the rural was parallel to the evolution of the cinema spectacle. Cinematic art emerged as urban entertainment. Thus, by the end of the 19th century, when the companies of Thomas Alva Edison and the Lumière brothers began popularizing moving images, European and North American cities experienced their fastest growth in history. For decades, cinema was a significant event in the realm of modernity. Over the years, certain cinematic styles unmistakably became urban: American film noir, Hollywood sophisticated comedy, Italian neorealism…

With a delay compared to the European and American context, in the Ibero-American sphere, including Portugal and Spain (according to the RAE), cinema also developed along with cities, but in a manner different from the Anglo-Saxon and French approaches. On one hand, the realities of the various countries were completely different. On the other, the exponential growth of major cities such as São Paulo, Mexico City, Madrid, or Buenos Aires allowed for the emergence of a rapid economy that fostered the cinema of those countries. Brazilian, Mexican, Spanish, and Argentine cinema undoubtedly benefited from the growth of their large cities.

Some fiction filmmakers have succeeded in solidifying their own image of the city. This is the case with Pedro Almodóvar’s Madrid, Luis Buñuel’s American period in Mexico City, Juan José Campanella’s Buenos Aires, the suburbs and the periphery in Lucrecia Martel’s cinema… Sometimes, a single film can shape the imagery of an entire city for decades, as happened with São Paulo, Sociedade Anônima (Luís Sérgio Person, 1965) or Cidade de Deus (Fernando Meirelles and Kátia Lund, 2002).

However, not only fiction feature films have presented creative representations of these communities’ cities. In non-fiction, the theme of the Ibero-American city has often been central, such as in Metal y melancolía (Heddy Honigmann, 1993) about Lima, Suite Habana (Fernando Pérez, 2003) depicting Havana, Mourir à Madrid (Frédéric Rossif, 1963) about Madrid, or La batalla de Chile, la lucha de un pueblo sin armas (Patricio Guzmán, 1975) portraying Santiago.

In the dossier “Urban Spaces and Cinema. Ibero-American Cities in the Audiovisual Field,” we present various works focusing on some of these issues: the city of Madrid and women, the development of existentialist cinema in São Paulo, the relationship of the recently deceased Carlos Saura with Murcia, the complex relationships of realism(s) portraying Madrid during the dictatorship, the study of social problems surrounding the mortgage crisis and its portrayal in Spanish media, and the representation of the Latin American cities using artificial intelligence tools.



Four individuals in São Paulo
Luis Deltell Escolar (Universidad Complutense de Madrid & ESCINE, Grupo Complutense de estudios cinematográficos) – 28:30
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/project/four-individuals-in-sao-paulo/?lang=en

A-Ten-Thousand-Legs Madrid
Asier Gil Vázquez (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid) –11:12
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/project/lunique-maria-casares-1922-2022/?lang=en

Dispossesssion Through Mortgage Debt in Three Acts
Laura Caballero Rabanal (University of Massachusetts Amherst) –  07:27
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/project/dispossession-through-mortgage-debt-in-three-acts/?lang=en

Realism(s)
Sylvia González Rodríguez (Universidad Complutense de Madrid) – 11:38
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/project/realisms/?lang=en

The Mistery of Creating: Murcia under Carlos Saura’s gaze
Daniel Toledo Saura (Universidad Complutense de Madrid) –  11:25
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/project/the-mystery-of-creation-murcia-through-the-eyes-of-carlos-saura/?lang=en

Cities of Ibero-America as seen by Artificial Intelligence
Nadia McGowan (Universidad Internacional de La Rioja) – 12:15
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/project/cities-of-ibero-america-as-seen-by-artificial-intelligence/?lang=en

Videoessays

The audiovisual essays accepted through the open call offer a variety of aesthetic and thematic registers as diverse as they are fascinating. Firstly, “Women on the Verge of a Financial Crisis” by Tomer Nechushtan establishes a series of parallels among four very distinct films: Gold Diggers of 1933 (LeRoy, 1933), Bande de Filles (Sciamma, 2014), Hustlers (Scafaria, 2019) and Birds of Prey (Yan, 2020). These works are connected by the way they portray sisterhood through criminal action in a context of socio-economic oppression. Secondly, Joseph M. Johnson explores in “Rapuncelia” how Pilar Palomero reconstructs the iconic tale in her film Las niñas (2020), offering a transgressive vision. The analysis delves into the symbolic and narrative layers the director employs to reinterpret this classic. Thirdly, “Power and Gardens” by Nico Carpentier is a four-part audiovisual essay investigating the intricate relationships between human beings and nature in the gardens of European cities such as Paris, Lyon, and Prague. This work delves into how gardens symbolize the anthropocentric domestication of nature, while simultaneously highlighting the inherent resistance of the natural world to any form of regimentation. Finally, in ” “Do you really want to have children? Off-screen Motherhood in Spanish Dramedies”, Lorenzo Torres, Mariona Visa, and Mª Isabel Menéndez explore the representation of motherhood in six contemporary Spanish dramedies produced or co-produced by streaming platforms. Among others, they analyze Vida perfecta, Cardo, and Valeria. This analysis provides a detailed look at how these productions address and challenge conventions related to motherhood.

In the section ‘From the Archive,’ Vicente Rodríguez Ortega weaves a history of film exhibition in Madrid by exploring the spaces where cinemagoing used to take place, spaces that have regrettably faded away. On one hand, it delves into the details of the buildings and locations where movie theaters once existed; on the other hand, it utilizes sound excerpts from a variety of films that may have been projected in these venues.

This issue features five new videos from the Screen Stars Dictionary. On one hand, four works that have already been added to the showcase on Vimeo are highlighted. Specifically, we present videos on Robert de Niro (by Daniel O’Brien), Shah Rukh Khan (by Ritika Kaushik), Tony Leung (by Jialu Zhu), and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan (by Sureshkumar P. Sekar). In addition, Evelyn Kreutzer contributes to the dictionary with a previously unpublished piece on Leonard Bernstein. With these new five videos and others that have been available on Vimeo for some time, our project becomes decidedly transnational and expands the boundaries of the “sayable” regarding audiovisual stardom.

Finally, in the “Student Showcase”, two projects by students from Universidad Complutense are presented. They explore, in very different ways, the urban space of Madrid through the films Los tramposos (Pedro Lazaga, 1959) and La virgen de agosto (Jonás Trueba, 2019).

Women on the Verge of Financial Crisis
Tomer Nechushtan (Tel Aviv University) –  04:58
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/project/women-on-the-verge-of-financial-crisis/?lang=en

Rapuncelia
Joseph M. Johnson (University of Massachusetts-Amherst)  – 04:30
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/project/rapuncelia/?lang=en

Power and Gardens
Nico Carpentier (Institute of Communication Studies and Journalism, Charles University, República Checa) – 29:47
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/project/power-and-gardens/?lang=en

“Do you really want to have children?”. Off-screen Motherhood in Spanish Dramedies Lorenzo Torres (Universidad Rey Juan Carlos), Mariona Visa (Universitat de Lleida) y Mª Isabel Menéndez (Universidad de Burgos) – 10:24
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/project/do-you-really-want-to-have-children-off-screen-motherhood-in-spanish-dramedies/?lang=en

Student Showcases

La virgen de diciembre
Gabriela Verdú Bisbal, Anabel Cobo Vázquez y Irene Igeño García
(Universidad Complutense de Madrid)
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/project/la-virgen-de-diciembre/?lang=en

Los tramposos
Pablo Manzano Ben
(Universidad Complutense de Madrid)
https://tecmerin.uc3m.es/project/los-tramposos/?lang=en

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