Wazzup Pilipinas!
In celebration of the International Women’s Month, Instituto Cervantes and the Film Development Council of the Philippines present Espacio Femenino, a series of women-themed Spanish films at the FDCP Cinematheque Centre Manila, Ermita, Manila.
The film series features four documentaries directed by female Spanish directors which highlight the role of women as drivers of political and social change.
“We are in full support of Instituto Cervantes for this continuing film series made by women and for women. We hope that through this, our own Filipino women audience here will be inspired and encouraged to not just celebrate their femininity but also use it to affect positive change in our society,” said FDCP Chair Liza Diño regarding the program.
Espacio Femenino films will be screened at the FDCP Cinematheque every Saturday from March 4 to 25, 6 p.m.:
March 4 – Las
Constituyentes by Oliva Acosta
The documentary is
about 27 women, members of parliament and senators, who were protagonists of
political change during Spain’s transition towards democracy, because of the
parliamentary role which they played during the first constituent term in
office in 1977 after the transition to democracy. Through the personal
experiences of these pioneering women, the documentary reveals a fascinating
side to the history of women’s political involvement in Spain and it analyses
its current state. The documentary also captures a meeting between present
female members of parliament and politicians and the mothers of the constitution,
which culminates in an intense debate. A cutting edge audio-visual work that
until now is unprecedented in the history of Spain.
March 11 –
Excluidas del Paraíso (Excluded from Paradise) by Esther Perez de Eulate
This film is a
documentary that attempts to find an answer to the question of what mechanisms
reproduce and perpetuate patriarchy in the 21st century through the voices of
relevant feminist thinkers.
March 18 – La
Fiesta de Otros by Ana Serret Ituarte
Verbenas, summer
festivals on town plazas featuring dance bands, were an integral part of the
filmmaker’s childhood in Asturias. Her documentary focuses on the “end of the
party”—when the plaza falls silent and “music, summer, work, money all
disappear when winter arrives for musicians belonging to a time that is slowly
fading away.”
March 25 – El Lugar
de las Fresas by Maite Vitoria Daneris
Lina is seventy
years old and has always been a farmer. Every morning, she leaves San Mauro,
the “strawberry town,” and goes to Europe’s biggest open-air market, Porta
Palazzo in Turin, where she sells her fruit, vegetables and strawberries. Lina
doesn’t have any children but she does have five dogs and a husband, who wishes
she would stop working, but his request is ignored. Until one day, at the
market, she meets Hassan, a young Moroccan immigrant looking for a job.
For more
information, visit the Instituto Cervantes website (http://manila.cervantes.es), www.facebook.com/InstitutoCervantesManila or email
cinematheque@fdcp.ph.
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