San Francisco International Film Festival 24 April - 08 May 2008

  • Skip to Main Content
  • Home
  • Info
  • Films
  • Big Nights
  • Events
  • Awards
  • News
  • About Us
  • Sponsors
 

FILMS/

LATENT ARGENTINA

Argentina latente

Documentaries

Argentina/France, 2007, 100 minutes

SHOWTIMES

Fri, Apr 25 / 6:00 / Kabuki / LATE25K
Sun, Apr 27 / 3:45 / PFA / LATE27P
Mon, Apr 28 / 4:15 / Kabuki / LATE28K
Wed, May 7 / 4:00 / Kabuki / LATE07K

CREDITS

dir
Fernando E. Solanas
prod
Fernando E. Solanas
scr
Fernando E. Solanas
cam
Rino Pravato, Alejandro Fernández Mouján, Fernando E Solanas
editor
Alberto Ponce, Mauricio Minotti , Fernando E. Solanas
mus
Gerardo Gandini
source
Cinesur OA, Roque Saenz Peña 793, 1636-Olivos, Buenas Aires, Argentina. EMAIL: fernandosolanas@fibertel.com.ar
Latent Argentina

Watch

When most people think of Argentina, they think of the inflation, poverty and helplessness that plagued the country in the wake of the financial crises of recent years. Actually, argues Fernando Solanas, Argentina is one of the richest countries in the world. Its shoreline, potable waters and farmland are bountiful. It has the sixth largest metal reserves in the world. It was, after the USSR, the United States and France, the fourth country to put a living being in space and bring him safely back to Earth. For Solanas, the fact that many Argentines don’t know that they are the owners of this enormous innate wealth is the result of “mental colonialism.” In an attempt to change this, he dedicates his film to “the young men and women, workers and scientists, willing to recover latent Argentina.” This Argentina of 36 million people is full of contradictions. A third of its population lives in poverty, and only one third has a high school education. Privatization of industry has left the country with polluted waterways, factory closures and a colossal brain drain. Not unlike a feisty, rebellious lawyer putting a powerful antagonist on trial, Solanas demonstrates that multinational corporations have corrupted Argentina with their wealth, forced the closure of the country’s greatest industries and are rendering the country unable to develop, leaving it ripe only for the exploitation of its natural resources. This film, the third of a series by Solanas, is an impassioned call for social and economic justice to inspire us all.

—Miguel Pendás

Presented in association with Global Exchange. North American Premiere.

 

BUY TICKETS

CALENDAR

SU MO TU WE TH FR SA
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10

SIGN UP FOR eNEWS

PODCASTS & VIDEO

BOX OFFICE

CLOSING NIGHT

  • Travel
  • Venues
  • Updates



Vanity Fair Reel Relief
  • Support the SF Film Society
  • Become an SFFS Member
  • Copyright © 2007 San Francisco Film Society