Los Cabos — Netflix is proving a boon to documentary creation in Mexico. That boon has not yet yielded a fully-fledged boom. The U.S. streaming giant has just released the first results of its documentary drive. The build in cinematic standard non-fiction works in, however, palpable, the biggest case in point to date, Diego Osorno’s milestone doc series “1994,” produced by Netflix and Vice Studios Latin America.
Osorno’s masterclass on “1994” proves one of the highlights of the 2019 Los Cabos Festival.
The rise of the documentary is also related to “superficiality” social media. Osorno said in his masterclass. “You go on Twitter” and massacre in Kenia, rebellion in Bolivia, slaughter in Chihuahua an you see 140 characters and think you’re keeping up to date with the new, but you don’t go into any event,” he said.
“People are seeking out non-fiction works and documentaries to understand what we thought...
Osorno’s masterclass on “1994” proves one of the highlights of the 2019 Los Cabos Festival.
The rise of the documentary is also related to “superficiality” social media. Osorno said in his masterclass. “You go on Twitter” and massacre in Kenia, rebellion in Bolivia, slaughter in Chihuahua an you see 140 characters and think you’re keeping up to date with the new, but you don’t go into any event,” he said.
“People are seeking out non-fiction works and documentaries to understand what we thought...
- 11/18/2019
- by John Hopewell and Emiliano Granada
- Variety Film + TV
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