An interesting article in this weekās Variety highlights the production of the film āEl SeƱor Presidenteā by RCTV, based on Miguel Angel Asturias, a Guatemalan Nobel Laureate in Literature.
Read the complete article on Varietyās website.
āEl SeƱor Presidenteā challenges Chavez
RCTV, the 53 year old Venezuelan terrestrial network that was yanked off the airwaves in May for its anti-government stance, is again defying the populist regime of President Hugo Chavez by producing a pic that openly describes a dictatorship in a Latin American country. This is RCTVās first film production in some 20 years.
Written, produced and helmed by RCTVās VP of Development and New Media, Romulo Guardia, āEl SeƱor Presidenteā (The President) is a film adaptation of the novel by Guatemalan 1967 Nobel Laureate in Literature, Miguel Angel Asturias. Guardiaās production company, Angostura Films, co-produced the pic.
āAside from exploring a variety of genres, we are looking to recreate Spanish classic literature that will appeal to a broad Latin American audience,ā Guardia says. RCTVās next pic is a horror thriller based on a Venezuelan legend. The web aims to make three pics next year and to eventually build up its feature film production output to 12 a year.
Leading distrib/exhib Cinematografica Blancica, which distributes pics from Sony Pictures and Warners in Venezuela, will release the drama by the end of November on 20 prints, a high count for a local pic.
Guardia shot āEl SeƱor Presidenteā in hi-def for less than $1 million in Caracas and other locations. āWe had to film in secret in order to avoid being shut down,ā says Guardia, a former exec at Discovery Latin America.
āEl SeƱor Presidenteā is set in a fictitious Latin American country living under a fierce dictatorship. In the story, the president uses his influence to destroy his rival and enemy, General Canales, the father of the young girl he fancies. āWe plan to market the film as a Guatemalan story to avoid any problems with authorities,ā says Blancica prexy Antonio Blanco.
RCTV lost its terrestrial broadcasting rights last spring when Chavezās democratically elected government opted not to renew the webās license, accusing it of siding with the opposition and allegedly violating broadcast laws. As of July, RCTV has been broadcasting on cable and satellite systems under the moniker RCTV Intl.
The Chavez government has been backing a slew of pics that local industryites and government watchdogs label as outright propaganda films, some shot in the new state-of-the-art studio facility outside Caracas, La Villa del Cine. Chavez has recently been hosting visits from Hollywood activists including Danny Glover, Sean Penn and Kevin Spacey.
Tags: venezuela, democracy, freedom, freedom of speech, rctv
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