Image Sosa Gil; Luis Armando Direction, Edition, Script, Production With a master's degree in Film Documentary Direction, he is a screenwriting professor at the UNAM and director of the Residencia Artística Internacional Foro Piezas, supported by IMCINE, FONCA, and the CITF by the Ministry of Culture of France. Winner of two Premios de la Juventud in Mexico, his film critiques have been published in Mexico and Italy. His work has been presented in DOK Leipzig, DocEdge, Atlanta Docufest, Imagine Science NY, FICGuadalajara, FICM, FICMonterrey, DocsMX, Cinespejo in Spain, among others, and screened in swiss airlines. He did an artistic residency in Macedonia, Turkey and Serbia, and was selected to participate in the Documentary Summer School in Locarno, Rencontres Internationals by the Festival TransAmériques (FTA) in Montreal, and the Education Exchange Program in Azerbaijan with National Geographic. Other Movies Sujo When a cartel gunman is killed, he leaves behind Sujo, his beloved 4-year-old son. The shadow of violence surrounds Sujo during each stage of his life in the isolated Mexican countryside. As he grows into a man, Sujo finds that fulfilling his father’s destiny may be inescapable. See More Sujo When a cartel gunman is killed, he leaves behind Sujo, his beloved 4-year-old son. The shadow of violence surrounds Sujo during each stage of his life in the isolated Mexican countryside. As he grows into a man, Sujo finds that fulfilling his father’s destiny may be inescapable. See More Mexico will no longer exist! A frenetic view runs over a convulsed Mexico City, a colossal metropolis sustained by the myth of "mestizaje" and other colonial forms of violence. Past and present weave a flurry of images; fragmented memories of this land. Ancient deities are incarnated, while dreams overlap among intimacy, complicity and the tumult. This is an erratic film that invites us to reimagine the complex relationship we have with the constructed “mexicanidad.” See More Related News ¡Conoce a la Sección Michoacana del 14º FICM! 09 · 19 · 16 Otros Realizadores Mexicanos Tenemos la misión de recolectar a las mentes mas creativas de México y promover su trayectoria al mundo. Ingresar
Image Sosa Gil; Luis Armando Direction, Edition, Script, Production With a master's degree in Film Documentary Direction, he is a screenwriting professor at the UNAM and director of the Residencia Artística Internacional Foro Piezas, supported by IMCINE, FONCA, and the CITF by the Ministry of Culture of France. Winner of two Premios de la Juventud in Mexico, his film critiques have been published in Mexico and Italy. His work has been presented in DOK Leipzig, DocEdge, Atlanta Docufest, Imagine Science NY, FICGuadalajara, FICM, FICMonterrey, DocsMX, Cinespejo in Spain, among others, and screened in swiss airlines. He did an artistic residency in Macedonia, Turkey and Serbia, and was selected to participate in the Documentary Summer School in Locarno, Rencontres Internationals by the Festival TransAmériques (FTA) in Montreal, and the Education Exchange Program in Azerbaijan with National Geographic.
Sujo When a cartel gunman is killed, he leaves behind Sujo, his beloved 4-year-old son. The shadow of violence surrounds Sujo during each stage of his life in the isolated Mexican countryside. As he grows into a man, Sujo finds that fulfilling his father’s destiny may be inescapable. See More
Sujo When a cartel gunman is killed, he leaves behind Sujo, his beloved 4-year-old son. The shadow of violence surrounds Sujo during each stage of his life in the isolated Mexican countryside. As he grows into a man, Sujo finds that fulfilling his father’s destiny may be inescapable. See More
Mexico will no longer exist! A frenetic view runs over a convulsed Mexico City, a colossal metropolis sustained by the myth of "mestizaje" and other colonial forms of violence. Past and present weave a flurry of images; fragmented memories of this land. Ancient deities are incarnated, while dreams overlap among intimacy, complicity and the tumult. This is an erratic film that invites us to reimagine the complex relationship we have with the constructed “mexicanidad.” See More