Revolución

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            Revolución

              35 Archival description results for Revolución

              ES ES-OVNI RSC-4082 · Item · 2003
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              What is a filmmaker? It is this vague, perhaps vain question that Travis Wilkerson hoped to answer clearly when he went to Cuba to question Santiago Alvarez, a legend of militant cinema. Although he had seen none of his films, Wilkerson did an interview with the master that quickly became something of a combined lesson in film and history, with Alvarez presenting his many essays and adding commentary. On returning from his trip, Wilkerson was very disappointed. The camera had recorded nothing of these very warm-hearted, instructive sessions, neither sound nor pictures. Technology had let him down. Alvarez's face and voice vanished, almost at the same time as himself. So only his films remain. His portrait remains to be done, to be made from scratch, from memory. This is why this homage to Alvarez is presented, according to a certain poetic tradition, in the form of a mélange. It includes Wilkerson's autobiographical parts, archive footage, excerpts of films made for Cuban television and pictures taken today, assembled with no concern for hierarchy or precedence.

              Untitled
              Anatomy of violence
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S013-SS007-0104 · Item · 1967
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              Video of the 1967 meeting in London of the “Symposium on the Dialectics of Liberation and the Demystification of Violence”, organized by R.D.Laing, with Allen Ginsberg, Paul Sweezey, Paul Goodman, Herbert Marcuse, Stokely Carmichael, Malcolm X, etc. An important record of the spectrum of leftwing politics and personalities during the turbulent Sixties.

              Untitled
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S012-SS003-0006 · Item · 2004
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              July 1st, 1997. An elderly man arrives in Italy on a flight from Paris. The special forces of the Carabinieri immediately arrest him. Antonio Negri had voluntarily returned to his home country after 15 years in exile. The newspaper Liberation hails it as, “The return of the Devil”. Over the years, few intellectuals have experienced as much admiration and hatred, or as much praise and rejection, as Antonio Negri. His book “Empire”, a critical analysis of the new global economy, was hailed as a bold new manifesto for the 21st century and overnight it turned Negri into a leading spokesperson for the international anti-globalization movement.

              Untitled
              Chiapas- Abuelito zapatista
              ES ES-OVNI RSC-1919 · Item · 2005
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              Listening Tzotzil's words of a man who has lived as a slave and tells us his memories. The conversation is translated into spanish by his son, and playing in the field are the grandchildrens. A generation that shows us his worth daily struggle, the struggle of the Zapatistas.

              Compromiso Cumplido
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S013-SS007-0043 · Item · 2007
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              In collaboration with “Comité de Liberación 25 de Noviembre”, this is a documentary about the human rights violations perpetrated by the Ulises Ruiz Ortiz government during the social mobilisations that shook Oaxaca in 2006, which ended with at least 25 assassinations recorded by the popular movement. Compromiso Cumplido (“True to My Pledge”) documents six political assassinations that took place in Oaxaca in 2006. It reveals the strategy of terrorism implemented by the State, and the impunity of the perpetrators.

              Untitled
              El Mégano
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S007-SS005-0010 · Item · 1954
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              This is one of the first films in pre-revolutionary Cuba, whose protagonists are not professional actors, which portrays the poverty of the coal workers and attempts to change their working conditions. 6th Independent Vídeo & Interactive Phenomena Show

              Untitled
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S016-SS001-0003 · Item · 2013
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              Dolores Tjeada Saavedra, the Councillor for Work at Marinaleda Town Council, gives a simple and detailed account of how a grassroots social movement has managed to socialize the means of production, housing, health, education and leisure in this small town in Southern Spain. Dolores explains the many benefits of having an active trade union, with the political power of the town counciland the productive force of cooperatives in the hands of the people. Marinaleda has a population of 3000, and an unemployment rate of 0%. Anybody who wants to self-build in the town is only charged 15 euros per month, and working families only pay 12 euros a month for childcare including meals, to name just two of a long list of social benefits. A true oasis in a country dominated byunbridled capitalism and the shabbiest and most retrograde government in Spain’s short history of democracy, which has left the country with an unemployment rate of 27% – 50% in the case of youth unemployment – and three million people living in poverty.

              Untitled
              Femi Kuti
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S013-SS007-0003 · Item · 2004
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              For decades, Nigerian icon Fela Kuti revolutionized “afro-beat”, a unique blend of driving funk and traditional African music that carried his message of liberation and dignity in the face of corruption. After Fela's death in 1997, his son Femi Kuti took over the afrobeat throne, and in 2000, Femi opened the New Africa Shrine in Lagos. A community center during the day and venue for ecstatic concerts at night, the Shrine is Femi's home... “Can't Buy Me”, Femi intones while the horns propel the music forward, dancers undulate, and the crowd finds release from the troubled state of the country in the joyous celebration...

              Untitled