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Event
LA Times Food Bowl Presents: Araya
The restoration of Margot Benacerraf's brilliant film Araya is a landmark in cinema history. The film was hailed as a masterpiece of poetic cinema and a forerunner of feminist Latina cinema on it's re-release by Milestone.
The peninsula of Araya in northeastern Venezuela, is one of the most arid places on earth. For five hundred years, since its discovery by the Spanish, the regions salt has been exploited manually. A 17th-century fortress built to protect against pirate raids stands as a reminder of the days when salt was worth almost as much as gold and great fortunes were made. Benacerraf captures the life of the salineros and their back-breaking work in breathtaking images. The Peredas family works at night in the salt marshes, the Ortiz are fishermen and the Salaz collect salt. The three stories underline the harsh life of this region all of which vanished with the arrival of industrial exploitation.
Araya was originally compared to Flahertys Man of Aran, Viscontis La Terra Trema (1947) and Rossellinis India (1957). Margot Benacerraf has described the film as a cinematic narration based on script writing rather than a spontaneous action, a feature documentary, the opposite of Italian neorealism. A film of such lasting beauty that Jean Renoir told Benacerraf after seeing the film: Above all dont cut a single image!
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LocationDowntown Independent (View)
251 South Main Street
Los Angeles, CA 90012
United States
Categories
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes! |
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