Mexico Bids Farewell to Distinguished Filmmaker Felipe Cazals
Telesure
English.com
October
16, 2021
"An indispensable director in the history of Mexican cinema, a storyteller who defended just cause, he inspired several generations," The Secretary of Culture noted.
Mexico's Secretary of Culture mourned the passing of renowned filmmaker Felipe Cazals at the age of 84 on Saturday.
Cazals was born in Mexico City in 1937. He
forged a robust and decisive work in Mexican cinematography.
'El Apando' (1975), 'Las Poquianchis' (1976), 'El año de la Peste' (1979), and 'Canoa', which won the Silver Bear in Berlin in 1976, are among his remarkable films.
Producer and screenwriter, Cazals won
several Ariel awards granted by the Mexican Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences, of which he was an emeritus member.
In 2007, he received Mexico's National Arts and Sciences Award.
He founded with a group of
friends and filmmakers the Independent Cinema Group to promote experimental
filmmaking In the 1960s. 'La manzana de la Discordia (1968), and
'Familiaridades' (1969) are his first plays with this group.
"An indispensable director
in the history of Mexican cinema, a storyteller who defended just cause, he
inspired several generations," The Secretary of Culture noted.
His famous 'Canoa' film is based on real events about a priest who incites a town to kill some young people by presenting them as a communist threat in 1968.
CAZALS,
Felipe
Born:
7/28/1937,
Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico
Died:
10/16/2021,
Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico
Felipe
Cazals’ westerns – director, writer:
El
tres de copes – 1986 [director]
Chicogrande
– 2010 [director, writer]
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