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Michoacan mission Fest Traveler: Morelia Film Festival

"It was my way of saying that we truly, truly want your film," Michel says.

Morelia is a fest that has earned, with dramatic speed, an international
rep for extending the welcome mat further, presenting films better, and
delivering the entire festival-going experience more vividly than many
other events of its medium size and age.

"The smartly programmed official selection captures very well the energy
and diversity of contemporary Mexican independent film," notes critic
and Museum of Moving Image editorial director Dennis Lim. "They've also
done a great job bringing in a wide range of international guests to
present retrospectives or premieres," such as Quentin Tarantino, who
unveiled his personal stash of Mexican B-movies last year.

Michel credits a set of coincidences that positioned the festival as a
must-see event. Having forged a strong network of filmmaker
relationships (including Fernando Eimbcke and Rodrigo Pla) through her
short film festival held at Mexico City's Cineteca, Michel saw there was
little support for younger Mexican filmmakers during an ebb for local
production in the mid- and late 1990s. During a 2001 visit to Morelia,
headquarters to exhib chain Cinepolis, Michel was invited by Cinepolis
topper Alejandro Ramirez to set up a Morelia-based event spotlighting
shorts and docs.

"It was the right move at the right time," she says, with a convivial
and beautifully preserved colonial city as host, an enthusiastic
exhibitor, hungry and ambitious filmmakers ready to burst out with a
flood of adventurous features, plus a mix of private support and public
aid via the state of Michoacan. The tone was set the first year in 2003
with the presence of Werner Herzog and Salma Hayek, who drew press, and a
small but respected Mexican film lineup, which established the
festival's ongoing central theme: What's new and vital in independent
Mexican cinema, especially in docs and shorts.

More than most newer Latin American fests, Morelia has established its
international credentials with a combination of factors: frequent repeat
visitors such as helmers Barbet Schroeder, Gus Van Sant and Telluride
co-director Tom Luddy; deliberate selection of important film artists,
such as director Cristian Mungiu, for the competition juries; and
cooperative programming ventures with the likes of Cannes' Critics'
Week, in which both festivals present a selection from the other's
lineup.

"From our first meeting with Daniela, we were impressed with her
ambition for the festival, and in particular her promotion of young
Mexican talents," says Critics' Week program director Remi Bonhomme.

Feature Competition


Malaventura (Michel Lipkes) Feature debut is a hotly anticipated new film from Mexico's emerging generation of filmmakers.

Artificial Paradises (Yulena Olaizola)With her first narrative feature, Olaizola returns to Morelia where she was acclaimed for her doc debut, Intimacies of Shakespeare and Victor Hugo.

The Prize (Paula Markovitch) Markovitch's Argentina-set family drama won two Berlin Silver Bears for artistic achievement.



The Last Christeros
(Matias Meyer) This could be Meyer's breakout film, after impressing auds and critics in Toronto.

See You, Dad (Lucia Carreras) Co-scribe of Camera d'Or winner Leap Year, Carreras' directorial debut preems in Morelia.

Machete Language (Kyzza Terrazas) Terrazas, former producer-writer for hot shingle Canana Films, debuted his film at Venice's Critics Week.

Doc Competition


The Open Sky (Everardo Gonzalez) Among the most discussed docs in this year's Guadalajara fest.

The Tiniest Place (Tatiana Huezo) An audacious directorial debut, inviting comparisons to Reygadas' Japan.

The Mexican Suitcase (Trisha Ziff) Widely traveled doc on Spanish Civil War photographers is in the Oscar doc hunt.

Rivers Of Men (Tin Dirdamal) Dirdamal won a Silver Ariel for first doc, No One, so expectations
are high on this look at Bolivia's water wars.

The Night Watchman (Natalia Almada) Almada looks to be hitting stride with her third doc, a standout at New Directors/New Films.