Riot!
Friday, 10 June, 14:15 - 15:50 / Kijkhuis 1
Saturday, 11 June, 17:15 - 18:50 / Kijkhuis 1
The crimes we see and the ones that remain invisible. State violence has many faces, encompassing the abuse of power, police brutality, the pursuit of unfair trials and arbitrary arrests. The films in this session examine valuable criticisms in an open discourse on globally recurring violations of humanity and unjust political events from new angles.
Tags: History, Politics, Agency | Content Warning: Graphic Violence, Sex, Animal Violence
On Friday 10 June and Saturday 11 June, Jerusha West (director of Solidago) will join us for a Q&A.
Duration
95 min.
France, November 2015. After the Paris terror attacks, the state of emergency is proclaimed to facilitate the work of police forces. 4 AM. A policewoman helps colleagues to conduct a search, but soon finds out that things aren’t going the way they’re supposed to.
What do we see from our windows? I see images of violence of a country in crisis through the eyes of Venezuelans, images of a social collective memory.
Under the dictatorship of Ben Ali, a man is kidnapped, tortured and killed, then vanishes without ever being found. Thirty years later, he comes back to talk to us.
Sofía is putting up search posters of her missing boyfriend Luis all over town. Copies of his picture surround her. Luis is one of the more than 80.000 missing persons in Mexico. At night Sofía faces a recurring dream: Little by little her world tranforms into paper.
Recollecting her youth during the 'Baby Scoop Era', Edith looks back on Solidago, an all-female rural community she was sent to in order to give birth to a child conceived outside of marriage.
Based on true events, ""Bestia"" explores the life of a secret police agent during the military dictatorship in Chile. Her relationship with her dog, her body, her fears and frustrations reveals a grim fracture of her mind and of the country.