FILMS IN CENTRAL
AMERICA
(Programme
of the 25th Festival of the 3 Continents, November 2003)
The
Cinematograph arrived in Central America around 1910. Travelling projectionists
used to criss-cross this vast cultural patchwork, with 533,000 sq. km.
stretching from the Selva de Petén in northern Guatemala to the
forests of Darién in southern Panama. Until the Seventies, the
few films made were the results of initiatives from isolated film buffs
who got little support from official institutions and the audience.
In Guatemala and Costa Rica, two feature films, El Sombrerón
and El Retorno, bear witness to such pioneering times. The first Panamanian
feature was made in 1950. Honduras, Nicaragua and El Salvador did not
produce their own films until 1970. Since the Seventies, the political
instability of the peninsula has contributed to the vulnerability and
dependence on the outside, typical of small economies, which also affect
film and television production and distribution. "The first criterion
to define the Central American film and television industry is that
there is no film industry in the region, although each country has its
own modest national cinema... No organised production, no steady foundation
for a potential industry. Nothing", explains María Lourdes Cortes,
head of the Costa Rican Film Centre and a specialist of Central American
cinema. Yet, in this context, independent film-makers keep writing,
shooting and editing images, no matter what.
Creating
at all costs
Making
a film is always a haphazard enterprise. In Central America, with its
history of major political fragmentation and social marginalisation,
such an enterprise becomes a genuine challenge. "In times of crisis,
only imagination matters more than knowledge", Albert Einstein said.
Central American film-makers constantly prove this to be true. Their
cinema is defined by their capacity to make do, to adapt, to imagine
and to work in a do-it-yourself spirit. Sometimes it takes years before
a film can get financed to be shot and edited. This is what happened
to Honduran film-maker Sami Kafati with No hay tierra sin dueño.
Telling stories with pictures, documenting the reality of given situations
through filmic metaphors seems to be, for some, an incredible urge,
a pure desire-even madness. "I always say that making films, creating,
is like flying. A bird flies because it is meant to fly. It is never
asked why it flies", says Costa Rican film-maker Ishtar Yasin who is
currently putting together, come hell or high water, her first fiction
feature project, El Camino. Its shooting has been postponed many times
because of lack of funds, but it will finally get started in January
2004 in Nicaragua.
Overcoming
obstacles
Central
American film archives mainly have short films made on video. Such a
format has made it possible for deprived countries with no tax incentives
to produce remarkable films such as Sergio Valdes Pedroni's in Guatemala,
María José Alvarez's in Nicaragua, Hilda Hidalgo's and
Ishtar Yasin's in Costa Rica. 35mm films are rare, fiction feature films
are even rarer...
The
moving picture field is an emerging area which is still at a research
and building stage. These countries do not have film industries, which
explains why Central America is non-existent on the international film
market. Many an obstacle is yet to be overcome. The lack of interest
of public agencies in this sector and the scale of priorities in times
of "reconstruction" mean that film is often dependent on aid from international
cooperation organisations which are the main coproducers of films and
videos. "Without the economic support from a number of cooperation organisations
over the last ten years, some film-makers just would have disappeared,
taking with them a certain angle on the reality of our region", Florence
Jaugey explains. Yet, to be dependent on NGOs means being constrained
to certain subject matters and making essentially social-issue films,
with the added constraint of going by given standards related to the
current development policies, which does not help meeting the demands
of the international market in terms of duration, viewpoint and argument.
Some film-makers suffer from such dependence which they sometimes feel
keeps them within certain creative boundaries; others have been able
to turn the constraint around and use it as a fantastic way to stimulate
their imagination. This is why documentary film is by far the main film
genre in the region. Film production will have to diversify in order
to further develop.
To
reclaim one's image is to exist
There
is currently no Central American film and television scene because there
is no Central American economy. During the civil war periods, making
images was impossible. Since the signing of peace agreements in the
Nineties, new films have been made, which shows that each country feels
the need to speak out, to reclaim its own "image" from the dominant
North American model. "Our territory is dying of picture malnutrition",
says Sergio Alejandro Valdes, a Guatemalan film-maker and critic. "You
cannot build a future if you don't have a memory as a mirror in which
you can look at and recognise yourself. This is what cinema is made
for. It is crucial that we look at ourselves with respect."
This
is only the beginning of the history of film in Central America. Viewers
must be aware of this when discovering the films from these countries.
The films shown in the retrospective show that this is a promising beginning.
The future depends on the ability of each country to assert itself,
organise and support the training of film-makers, to keep a fresh creative
drive and affirm the richness of its cultural diversity.
Emmanuelle
Hascoët
Central American programme coordinator