Only in its 3rd iteration, New York’s Neighboring Scenes series has quickly become one of the most exciting bits of any year’s film festival schedule. Focusing on modern Latin American cinema, Ns teams The Film Society Of Lincoln Center and distributor Cinema Tropical, who join forces to highlight the latest and greatest in Latin American filmmaking, featuring films from countries like Bolivia and Chile, and the hottest films from places like Costa Rica and Cuba.
And among these films are some truly superb discoveries. Opening the festival is Anahi Berneri’s Alanis, a gorgeous and haunting looking at life on the margins in Buenos Aires. The story of a young woman trying to do right by herself and child on the streets of Buenos Aires, Alanis is a captivating and deeply moving look at life as part of the culturally forgotten, and is a cementing of Berneri as...
And among these films are some truly superb discoveries. Opening the festival is Anahi Berneri’s Alanis, a gorgeous and haunting looking at life on the margins in Buenos Aires. The story of a young woman trying to do right by herself and child on the streets of Buenos Aires, Alanis is a captivating and deeply moving look at life as part of the culturally forgotten, and is a cementing of Berneri as...
- 3/1/2018
- by Joshua Brunsting
- CriterionCast
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