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    Meet the directors, too

    Catch the Wave: Festival highlights the best new Latin American films

    David Theis
    David Theis
    Apr 28, 2010 | 8:47 pm
    "Gigante" (Giant), directed by Adrián Biniez, (Uruguay Argentina, 2009, 90 minutes, subtitled)

    Here’s an only-in-Houston conjunction of art and commerce: Rather than being dreamed and willed into being by a cinephile, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston's Latin Wave festival of Latin American films is the brainchild of two international corporations, Tenaris, an oil field services company, and steel giant Ternium.

    They both belong to an Argentine holding company which contracted with a Buenos Aires contemporary arts museum, Proa, to spearhead its worldwide cultural outreach program.

    Both companies have large offices in Houston, so they asked Proa director Guillermo Goldschmidt to develop cultural activities here. Goldschmitt was attracted by the MFAH’s strong Latin American arts programming, so he approached the museum about beginning a film festival. “Tenaris and Ternium saw film as a good way to communicate about the various cultures of Latin America,” he says.

    The MFAH agreed, and five years ago the festival began, programmed by Colombia native Monika Wagenberg. Since then, Latin Wave has grown in importance on the Houston film calendar. This year's edition opens Thursday, with three screenings (including one at the Rice Media Center), and continues through Sunday.

    MFAH Film and Video curator Marian Luntz attributes the festival’s success to Wagenberg’s informed and passionate programming. Wagenberg programs Latin American films for festivals ranging from Miami’s Cinema Tropical, the New York Latin American Film Festival, the Zurich Film Festival, and, last but decidedly not least, the venerable Cartagena (Colombia) Film Festival, which recently celebrated its 50th anniversary.

    Latin Wave mainly lands films that are making the international festival circuit, but which are not widely available, or even known, here. For example, the truly great Mexican film Silent Light screened here in 2007, but appeared on very few other U.S. screens. As selected by Wagenberg, all the films are of high cinematic quality, and all are making their Houston debut. Directors often accompany their films, and the whole thing kicks off with a great party.

    This year’s lineup looks strong. A partial list includes Uruguyan director Adrian Biniez’s Gigante, which generated considerable buzz in Toronto and Berlin. Mexican director Pedro Gonzalez-Rubio’s Alamar is “hot on the film circuit” right now, according to Luntz. The Brazilian film Jean Charles tells the tragic story of the Brazilian immigrant to London who was mistakenly killed by police there after the terrorist attack on the subway.

    Obviously, Wagenberg has her finger on the pulse of Latin American film, which has soared in both quality and international recognition in recent years, in a renaissance that began when the Argentine government offered financial incentives to filmmakers. That country’s film industry took off to the point that now some 100 features are made there each year, a semi-astonishing number.

    This year’s Oscar winner for Best Foreign Language Film was Argentina’s The Secret of Their Eyes. Other governments have since followed Argentina’s lead, and camera crews are turning up all over the continent.

    Wagenberg normally shows 25 or so films at the other festivals she programs. But because Latin Wave is so concentrated — eight films in four days — Wagenberg is able to edit her list so that the MFAH gets “the best of the best,” in her words.

    Houston audiences have responded. “The audiences are very diverse, active, and enthusiastic,” Wagenberg says. “It’s very rewarding for the filmmakers and for me.”

    She adds that the directors are always surprised to see how diverse Houston is, and that when she takes them on a whirlwind cultural tour, “the art [in Houston] is amazing for them, as it was for me the first time.”

    She says she can’t pick a favorite from this year’s films, but she does note a trend that they share. “The setting is a lead character [in several of the films],” she says. That is, several of the films bring to life corners of the world that have seldom been seen in film, such as the beautifully photographed Peruvian fishing village in Undertow, and the harsh Brazilian outback in I Travel Because I Have To, I Come Back Because I Love You.

    Though she doesn’t name a personal favorite among the films, Wagenberg talks more about Argentina’s Historias Extraordinarias (Extraordinary Stories) than the others. Latin American film has tended toward the intimate, she says, but Extraordinary Stories is a four-and-a-half hour epic narrative “with not one minute of excess.”

    "Gigante" (Giant), directed by Adrián Biniez, (Uruguay Argentina, 2009, 90 minutes, subtitled)

    unspecified
    news/entertainment

    Movie Review

    Offbeat drama Pillion features command performance by Alexander Skarsgård

    Alex Bentley
    Feb 20, 2026 | 4:30 pm
    Alexander Skarsgård and Harry Melling in Pillion
    Photo courtesy of A24
    Alexander Skarsgård and Harry Melling in Pillion.

    Describing the new movie Pillion is almost an act of futility. It contains a variety of seemingly disparate parts that coalesce into a whole to make it utterly fascinating. Few other recent films have been able to walk the line between filthy and wholesome in quite the way this one does, and that’s only because few other filmmakers would actually dare to try.

    It centers on Colin (Harry Melling), a meek man in his mid-thirties who still lives at home with his parents, Pete (Douglas Hodge) and Peggy (Lesley Sharp), while working a dead-end job giving out parking tickets. While performing in a barbershop quartet at his local pub, Colin catches the eye of biker Ray (Alexander Skarsgård), who summons him for a clandestine hook-up the following day (which just so happens to be Christmas Day).

    With barely a word exchanged between them, Ray establishes a dominance over Colin that quickly leads to them starting a relationship in which Colin does anything Ray asks. And that means more than just sex: Colin, whether desperate for any kind of affection or unlocking a side of himself he hadn’t known, readily agrees to cook, clean, shop, and basically do whatever else Ray wants him to do.

    Written and directed by first-time feature filmmaker Harry Lighton, the film is astonishing in the way it’s able to mine humor from Colin and Ray’s atypical bond. To call Ray “unfeeling” might not be totally accurate, but the way he treats Colin borders on cruel. However, the way Lighton structures the film, it’s easy to understand why someone like Colin would be willing to go along with the situation. It’s both hilarious and heartbreaking to see Colin debase himself in a variety of ways.

    On the flip side is Colin’s heartfelt arc with his parents. It’s established right away that Peggy, who is sick with cancer, is a bit too involved with Colin’s love life, with the opening scene featuring her setting him up on a blind date. But their easy acceptance of his queerness and desire to see him find love is as heartwarming as it gets. The juxtaposition between the wholesomeness of their family and Colin’s new life is also the source of a good amount of comedy.

    Lighton does not shy away from the sexual side of Colin and Ray’s relationship, and the scenes he depicts are as graphic as you are likely to see in an R-rated film. Some go up to and a little past what might be expected in a mainstream movie (including the use of a certain fake appendage). Other times they play out in a comical way to illustrate just how far Colin has progressed from the person he was when the film started.

    Skarsgård, who stole the show in the Charli XCX movie The Moment, is the attraction in more ways than one in this film. The part calls for someone who’s not only impossibly handsome, but also a person who can stop dissent with just a glance, and he lives up to both qualities equally well. Melling, best known for playing Neville Longbottom in the Harry Potter movies, also embodies his role perfectly. He plays Colin as weak enough to be run roughshod over by Ray, but not so hopeless as to not be worth rooting for.

    Pillion (which is the name of the secondary seat on a motorcycle on which Colin rides multiple times in the film) operates at a storytelling level that is difficult to achieve. Many people will not fully understand the film’s central relationship, but the way it is showcased by Lighton makes it compelling, gut-wrenching, and sexy.

    ---

    Pillion is now playing in theaters.

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