Carlos Aguilar
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From a star-studded adaptation of a novel to a documentary about Tejano icon Selena Quintanilla, this year’s slate of movies premiering at Sundance include several efforts by Latino filmmakers.
For the better part of the last two decades, numerous Mexican directors have addressed the country’s drug violence head-on through their films.
Based on the real-life 1971 disappearance of Brazilian Congressman Rubens Paiva, the movie, directed by Walter Salles, is a profile of one family’s resolve.
2024 was truly a banner year for Latino and Latin American cinema. These are the 20 films that stuck with us over the last 12 months.
Telling a story wholly from the POV of the main characters required sensitivity, confident actors and a wizardly cinematographer in the awards-buzzed Jomo Fray.
A new feature-length adventure starring the beloved human-canine duo Wallace & Gromit maintains Aardman Animations’ handmade ethos and charming silliness.
Currently playing at select Cinépolis theaters around the country, ‘Sujo’ tracks the difficult upbringing of a young man trying to escape falling prey to the same fate as his criminal father.
Director Mohammad Rasoulof is banned at home in Iran but continues to make prize-winning work, including his latest thriller, ‘The Seed of the Sacred Fig.’
A conversation-starter of a film by director Mati Diop, this brief but complex examination of a France-to-Africa transfer of ancient art asks: Who benefits?
Directed by Alonso Ruizpalacios and co-starring Raúl Briones, the indie — based on a 1957 Arnold Wesker play — takes place in a busy Times Square restaurant.