The Plague (La Plaga) will close the second edition of the festival. |
The main part of the programme concentrates on eight films. Edinburgh Filmhouse will open Iberodocs 2015 with Mercedes Sosa: The Voice of Latin America, a study of the eponymous Argentinian folk singer, while Glasgow CCA plays host to the festival's closing film - The Plague - ten days later. In the time between those two films, audiences can access a Madrileño 'adult' cinema in Paradiso, a daughter's return to Paraguay to care for her mother in Cloudy Times (including a Q&A with director Arami Ullón), transgender experiences in Puerto Rico in Mala Mala, the lives of rural communities in the Basque Country in Etxea: The Basque Word For Home (including a Q&A with director Basharat Khan), and an existential journey into the Andes in Humano.
The Salt Of The Earth |
Following on from their screening of Lois Patiño's Coast Of Death last year, the 2015 festival also takes 'New Galician Cinema' as a focus, showcasing the region's resurgence in non-fiction filmmaking in recent years. Films in this section include Arraianos - Eloy Enciso's portrait of an otherworldly village on the Galicia-Portugal border - and Vikingland, in which director Xurxo Chirro edits found-footage around the structure of Herman Melville's Moby Dick to explore economic migration and cultural identity. The producer of both films - Beli Martínez - will be in attendance for Q&A sessions after the screenings. Likewise director Pela del Álamo will be in Glasgow for the screening of his documentary about the road linking Madrid and Galicia, N-VI Vanishing Roadsides. The three feature-length documentaries in Focus on Galicia are each accompanied by a short film directed by Lois Patiño, Eloy Domínguez Serén, and David Hernández respectively.
Full details of the festival - including further information about the films - can be found on the Iberodocs website. Tickets can be purchased from Filmhouse and Glasgow CCA
Related Features: Director Xurxo Chirro talks about Vikingland and New Galician Cinema. Iberodocs opening night