The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Film festival opens Tuesday

Armand Assante, a tribute to late Raul Julia part of the free film fest

- By JoeAmarant­e jamarante@nhregister.com @Joeammo on Twitter

NEWHAVEN>> The internatio­nal film festival beginning in the Elm City Tuesday may be the coolest one you’ve never heard of.

The fifth edition of the festival is big enough, at six days, that it’s bringing in more than 20 filmmakers/actors (including wellknown actor Armand Assante) for film showings, panels and Q&As. And it’s all free. Gratis.

Featuring shorts, documentar­ies and scripted films from Spain, Portugal and Latin America, the New England Festival of Ibero American Cinema even has its own cocktail: Local eatery Soul de Cuba Cafe has invented a Passion Fruit Mojito as the official mojito of the festival (and $2 of every drink will be contribute­d to NEFIAC).

Anyway, you don’t have to eat, drink or speak Spanish to attend, but you should be able to read the requisite subtitles for these eye-opening films. And think a bit about film.

The still-intimate festival encourages interactio­n with filmmakers at events, and it’s free and open to the public. Opening night at the Arts Hall in ACES Educationa­l Center for the Arts (at Audubon and Orange streets) will begin at 7 p.m. with remarks by Marta Moret, wife of Yale President Peter Salovey, who is also president of a publicheal­th consulting firm. After that will be a screening of the Cuban film “Behavior,” which tells the story of an 11-year-old boy who cares for his drug-addicted mother by raising pigeons and fighting dogs, and who forms a close bond with a teacher.

“The bureaucrac­y in the Cuban government is what makes most Cubans crazy,” said festival Director Margherita Tortora, “because everything has to be totally by the book, even if ... it has no common sense to it. So this film is a shout-out against that. It’s an appeal to using common sense in catering education for the student and not according to (rigid) rules.”

Tortora, who went to grade school at St. Bernadette’s School in Morris Cove with former Mayor John DeStefano, former Police Chief William Farrell and this reporter, grew up in a family that spoke Italian and English at home (her father is well-known physician Frank Tortora, a Yale-educated townie still ambling around New Haven at 101).

Margherita learned Spanish as a kid and excelled at it in high school and college; she spent her junior year of college in Spain. She married a man from Puerto Rico whom she met in graduate school in Texas and lived in Puerto Rico for awhile, moving back to New Haven to help care for her aging parents 21 years ago andwork at Yale University, where she teaches Spanish.

Tortora, who calls herself a cinephile, said she’s always gone to film festivals and teaches a course on Spanish through American film.

“I wanted to share that with the people of New Haven because I’m from New Haven,” she said when asked why she started the festival. “I’m very dismayed at the racial profiling, at misunderst­anding because people just don’t know about each other and don’t know about other cultures. I think it’s basically due to ignorance.”

Tortora said through filmand this filmfest, “you could get a grasp about so many different cultures ... see what’s being done. In a positive light, (you can) meet filmmakers, actors, producers who are doing excellent work in Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking countries.”

Film-goers learn useful things because Latin American and Iberian films are about what the filmmaker knows, she said, “so their culture and their country is reflected in their films.”

The festival moves to the Whitney Humanities Center (at Wall and Church streets) for Wednesday through Sunday, starting with a tribute to the legacy of Raul Julia 20 years to the week since his death. In what should be a riveting evening, Julia’s widow Merel will attend, as will Assante and actress Julie Carmen. A panel discussion will begin at 6 p.m., followed at 7 by a showing of one of Raul Julia’s finest performanc­es, in “The Penitent.” More at http://juliecarme­nactress.com/thepeniten­t/).

Festival highlights

• Films you can’t see elsewhere in this country, including “Franco’s Settlers” from Spain, “Azu, Soul of a Princess” from Venezuela and “Highs and Lows” from Ecuador.

• Petra Costa’s “Elena,” a critically acclaimed film backed by Tim Robbins, was themost-watched documentar­y in Brazil last year.

• Award-winning shorts and one feature film that address LGBT themes, including “The Blessing/La Santa” from Chile.

• The American premiere of the winning shorts from a young filmmakers showcase in Havana, Cuba, which screens at NEFIAC each year, “From Cuba/ Desde Cuba,” a competitio­n for filmmakers 35 and younger.

• A Thursday 6 p.m. panel discussion at the Whitney Humanities Center, “Women Who Make Films,” which will feature Caridad Sorondo of Puerto Rico and Tatiana Rojas of Venezuela.

“She (Sorondo) is terrific,” said Tortora. “She had her own television show in Puerto Rico, called “En La Punta de la Lengua” (“On the Tip of the Tongue”) ... She’s going to moderate the Raul Julia discussion ... and she made this film (“Dona Ines Maria de Mendoza: Word as Destiny”) about the first first lady of Puerto Rico, so after that she’ll have a Q&A.” (Rojas, meanwhile, runs an all-woman filmmaker cooperativ­e.)

• The festival’s final day of Oct. 26 is packed. A Venezuelan kids movie, “The Blue Apple,” will lead it off at noon, followed by a documentar­y by Carmen Alarcon (who will be on hand) called “Guadalupe: No Passport Needed” at 2:40 p.m. (about internatio­nal devotion to the Virgin of Guadalupe). Colombian filmmaker Antonio Dorado will lead a Q&A at 6 p.m. about two films, including the feature film about the Cali drug culture/war called “Dangerous Love,” which features great music, said Tortora. The 8 p.m. capper is a Peruvian film, “Gospel of the Flesh,” which is Peru’s official submission for the 2015 Oscars. It will be followed by a Q&A with director Eduardo Mendoza and a final reception featuring food by Soul de Cuba.

Tortora said the festival is a labor of love, which she struggles to keep free in New Haven with limited funding. “Really, this festival is a treat for New Haven. It’s a gift to New Haven, because in other places, in other festivals, people are paying $50 to watch each one of these films, from $15$50. And they don’t have the luxury of listening to so many of the filmmakers.”

Reservatio­ns for the screenings are not required, but are recommende­d. Reserve a seat at https://nefiac2014.eventbrite.com.

 ?? NEFIAC ?? The story of a boy, his drug-addicted mother and his pigeons, the Cuban film “Behavior,” will be shown Tuesday, opening night of the New England Festival of Ibero American Cinema.
NEFIAC The story of a boy, his drug-addicted mother and his pigeons, the Cuban film “Behavior,” will be shown Tuesday, opening night of the New England Festival of Ibero American Cinema.
 ?? JUDY SIROTA ROSENTHAL - COURTESY OF ARTS COUNCIL OF GREATER NEW HAVEN ?? Margherita Tortora is the festival director and founder.
JUDY SIROTA ROSENTHAL - COURTESY OF ARTS COUNCIL OF GREATER NEW HAVEN Margherita Tortora is the festival director and founder.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Actors Armand Assante and Julie Carmen will be here Wednesday for the evening honoring the work of Raul Julia.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Actors Armand Assante and Julie Carmen will be here Wednesday for the evening honoring the work of Raul Julia.
 ??  ??
 ?? NEFIAC ?? The Mexican film “Guadalupe: No Passport Needed,” will be screened Oct. 26.
NEFIAC The Mexican film “Guadalupe: No Passport Needed,” will be screened Oct. 26.

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