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for whom the bell tolls: reverberations from the spanish civil war april 1997
photo: a scene from |
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"They wrote in the old days that it is sweet and fitting to die for one's country. But in modern war there is nothing sweet or fitting in your dying. You will die like a dog for no good reason." -- Ernest Hemingway, in Notes for the Next War, after witnessing the treachery and waste of the Spanish Civil War On the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the beginning of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), The Film Society of Lincoln Center, ALBA (The Abraham Lincoln Brigades Archives) and the Cervantes Institute are proud to present a series of films illuminating one of the most idealistic and most tragic wars ever waged. Just three years before Hitler plunged the whole world into war, he and Mussolini bankrolled Generalissimo Francisco Franco in a brutal military coup in Spain, providing his Nationalists with arms and supplies in their suppression of the Republicans or Loyalists. The western democracies remained non-interventionist, cutting off the flow of arms to the beleaguered Loyalists; ironically, support--with strings attached--came from the Soviet Union's anti-fascist regime. From the USA, France, England, Germany, Italy, and 47 other countries, nearly 40,000 idealistic volunteers arrived in Spain to fight in International Brigades alongside the out-gunned, out-numbered, incredibly courageous Republicans.
Among the Europeans were André Malraux and George Orwell. The American contingent was dubbed the Abraham Lincoln Brigade; of the 3,000 who signed up, 1,000 were killed and many of those who came home were blacklisted as "premature anti-fascists." Hemingway's Robert Jordan in For Whom the Bell Tolls is loosely drawn from men who enlisted in the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. This series presents Spanish and an "international brigade" of filmmakers, each of whom offers different perspectives and memories of a bloody conflict that has become the stuff of legend. At presstime, we expect filmmakers Pilar Miró, Abe Osheroff, Judy Montell, Barbara Salomon, and Jorge Amat to attend. The series has been curated by Wendy Keys at the Film Society of Lincoln Center; Julia Newman, member of the Board of Governors of ALBA; José-Maria Conget of the Cervantes Institute; and Fredda Weiss, member of the Board of Governors of ALBA. With special thanks to the Cervantes Institute for support and assistance. program notes and times
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a scene from YOUR NAME POISONS MY DREAMS
a scene from LAND AND FREEDOM
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Note: DREAMS AND NIGHTMARES, WHEN THE WAR WAS OVER, LAND AND FREEDOM and FOREVER ACTIVISTS! / ABRAHAM LINCOLN BRIGADE VETERANS are mainly or entirely in English. ON THE EMPTY BALCONY will be in Spanish without subtitles. Simultaneous translation will be provided. GUERNICA is in French without subtitles. All other films are in Spanish with English subtitles.
EN EL BALCON VACIO / ON THE EMPTY BALCONY
TU NOMBRE ENVENENA MIS SUENOS /
DREAMS AND NIGHTMARES
LAND AND FREEDOM
FOREVER ACTIVISTS! / ABRAHAM LINCOLN BRIGADE VETERANS
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a scene from COUSIN ANGELICA
a scene from CANCIONES PARA DESPUES DE UNA GUERRA
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LA PRIMA ANGELICA / COUSIN ANGELICA Carlos Saura, Spain, 1974;105 minutes Three times turned down by Franco's script censors, Saura's COUSIN was essentially unshowable in Spain after part of the print was stolen from a Madrid theater and a Barcelona moviehouse was firebombed for screening this cinematic remembrance of things past. As a middle-aged, bachelor businessman (the superb José Luis Lopez Vasquez) travels to Segovia in 1973 to re-inter his mother's bones, he finds himself on a psychological pilgrimage back to the summer of 1936 when, as a ten-year-old, he was stranded by the outbreak of the Civil War with his anti-Republican relatives. It was then that he first fell in love with Angelica, his cousin, now unhappily married and a mother. In dreams and memories (recalling the flow of Bergman's Wild Strawberries), Luis walks into his past and tries to alter the present. Saura paints complex history and obsessive personal memory into a picture of a whole country's waking dream--or nightmare. (Winner, Golden Palm, Special Jury Prize, Cannes Film Festival) Wednesday, April 30: 4 pm Thursday, May 1: 4:15 and 6:30 pm
CANCIONES PARA DESPUES DE UNA GUERRA
RAZA
CHRONICLES OF HOPE
ESPOIR / MAN'S HOPE aka SIERRA DE TEREUL
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