Latin Heat
Spotlight

LALIFF Connect: Free Virtual Film Festival

Academy Award®-nominated actor Edward James Olmos, founder of the Latino Film Institute, announced today that the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival (LALIFF) will host a virtual retrospective program of its 2019 edition from April 14 to May 4, 2020 in anticipation of its 2020 virtual edition, LALIFF Connect, held from May 5 – 31st.  LALIFF Connect 2020 and 2019 Retrospective will include feature films, short films, episodics, masterclasses and musical performances — all will be available through LALIFF’s website for free with additional titles to be announced. 

“We are living in unprecedented times and we must find unprecedented solutions to continue to support our Latino filmmakers and provide them with a platform to showcase their work,” says Olmos, founder of LALIFF. “Working together with our filmmakers, musicians, partners and sponsors we will be able to celebrate our festival virtually to continue to showcase some of the most inspiring and thought-provoking Latino films of 2020 and share with cinephiles everywhere, from the safety of their homes.” 

The program will include the feature film The Last Rafter from award-winning directing duo Carlos Rafael Betancourt and Oscar Ernesto Ortega. The critically acclaimed film follows the journey of a Cuban man who risks his life in the Florida Straits on a raft to search for his long-absent father in Miami, but a political shift makes him America’s first undocumented Cuban immigrant. Now he must battle the new and bigger fear of deportation, while trying to find where he really belongs. 

Paper Children directed by Alexandra Codina will also be part of the festival with a special virtual event followed by a Q&A session on Tuesday, May 12. The film, available on YouTube this summer, explores America’s invisible refugee crisis through the eyes of one Miami family who navigate a broken system with unwavering resilience. 

The Chilean film This Is Cristina, directed by Gonzalo Maza, distributed by Figa Films and executive produced by Salma Hayek, will also be part of the Festival’s Official Selection. The film tells the story of Cristina and Susana, who have been best friends since high school but now, when they are already over 30 years-old, are receiving a wake-up call. 

In addition, the program will include six short films 1,2,3 All Eyes on Me directed by Emil Gallardo, Baby directed by Thais Drassinower, Flowers Within directed by Catalina Loret, Maria directed by Zoe Salicrup Junco, Rizo directed by Jeanette Dilone, Say You Will directed by Mariel Sosa and the animated shorts Ailin On the Moon directed by Claudia Ruiz, Borrachero directed by Gustavo Cerquera Benjumeaand Miguel directed by Armando Sepulveda Mendoza

“LALIFF Connect is our new online initiative to address the world’s current reality. LALIFF Connect is completely free to the public in order to support our community during the stay-at-home emergency order,” says Executive Director of LALIFF, Rafael Agustín. 

The LALIFF Connect 2020 Music program will include performances by top Latinx artists Def Sound, Chrisol, Lupita Infante, Tatiana Hazel and Weapons of Mass Creation.

LALIFF Connect 2020 will also present a series of masterclasses including Nightlife Curation in the LatinX World with Cumbiaton’s DJ Sizzle of Cumbiatón and Funky Caramelo; LatinX in Animation: A Masterclass with Head of Story of Connected at Sony Pictures Animation Guillermo Martinez, Co-Producer at Walt Disney Animation Studios Yvett Merino, and Creative Producer of The Casagrandes at Nickelodeon Animations Studio Miguel Puga; Music Composition: Masterclass with composer Elik Álvarez, composer Tony Morales and composers/producers Carl Thiel and Maria Vertiz; and a Sound Design Masterclass with the Sound Designer of the film The Last Rafter, Paola Magrans.  

The program will also host a special virtual event of the film Divine Love directed by Gabriel Mascaro followed by a special presentation with music from DJ José Galvan on April 29th

The shorts section of the virtual festival will include And the Brave Shall Rise directed by Adam Schlachte, Chicle (Gum) directed by Lizette Barrera, Figueroa directed by Victor Hugo Duran, Pozole directed by Jessica Mendez Siqueiros, Simon Cries” directed by Sergio Guataquira Sarmiento, Skaya directed by Gabriel Noguez, Suicidrag directed by Andrea Perez Su, Unlucky’s Luck directed by Felipe Holguin Caro, and Water Warrior directed by Monica Medellín. The episodic section includes South of Sunset, Stoned Breakups and Unimundo 45.  

There will also be a LALIFF 2019 Retrospective, that brings some of the best acts of last year’s edition including ‘La Mera’ Candelaria, DJ José Galván, DJ Vick Jagger and Linda Nuves of Chulita Vinyl Club who will join us again to perform on the following dates: 

Additionally, the Youth Cinema Project (YCP)—another initiative of the Latino Film Institute—in an effort to help its teachers and students while schools remain closed, has also started a program called YCPLiveReads. YCP will host live script readings of its students by talent from TV series and films including Gentefied, Vida, Devious Maids, Napoleon Dynamite, among others every Wednesday and Friday at 1pm PDT throughout the month of April. This week’s YCPLiveReads will include participation from the cast of Spanish Aquí Presents and Devious Maids. People can join the live reads by visiting YCP website or by searching the hashtag #YCPLiveReads on social media. 

Presenting sponsors include EGEDA, AltaMed, Sony and WGAW. 

For the LALIFF full programming slate and schedule please visit www.latinofilm.org.

Related posts

Disney Greenlights Series ‘Primos’ About Extended Multicultural Mexican-American Family

latinheat
November 5, 2021

What I Want From The DGA Is An Honest Discussion

latinheat
September 11, 2020

“Geronimo: Life on the Reservation” Returns to Santa Monica

latinheat
March 23, 2019
Exit mobile version