Fernando Solanas Explained

Fernando Solanas
Office:Argentine Ambassador to UNESCO
Term Start:10 December 2019
Term End:6 November 2020
Predecessor:Rodolfo Terragno
Successor:Marcela Losardo
Office1:National Senator
Term Start1:10 December 2013
Term End1:10 December 2019
Constituency1:City of Buenos Aires
Office2:National Deputy
Term Start2:10 December 2009
Term End2:10 December 2013
Constituency2:City of Buenos Aires
Birth Date:16 February 1936
Birth Place:Olivos, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Death Place:Neuilly-sur-Seine, France
Death Cause:COVID-19[1]

Fernando Ezequiel "Pino" Solanas (16 February 1936 – 6 November 2020)[1] was an Argentine film director, screenwriter, score composer and politician. His films include; La hora de los hornos (The Hour of the Furnaces) (1968), Tangos: el exilio de Gardel (1985), Sur (1988), El viaje (1992), La nube (1998) and Memoria del saqueo (2004), among many others. He was National Senator representing the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires for six years, from 2013 to 2019.

Solanas studied theatre, music, and law. In 1962, he directed his first short feature Seguir andando and in 1968 he covertly produced and directed his first long feature film La Hora de los Hornos, a documentary on neo-colonialism and violence in Latin America. The film won several international awards and was screened around the world. Solanas won the Grand Jury Prize and the Critics Award at the Venice Film Festival and the Prix de la mise en scène at the Cannes Film Festival. In 1999 he was the president of the jury at the 21st Moscow International Film Festival.[2] He was awarded a special Honorary Golden Bear at the 2004 Berlin Film Festival. He collaborated with tango composer and musician Ástor Piazzolla on the soundtracks for various movies.

Background

Solanas was at the forefront of the Grupo Cine Liberación which shook Argentine cinema during the 1970s, developing its social conscience and political voice. He was active in the campaign to support Perón[3] . Threatened by right-wing forces in the 1970s, one of his actors was assassinated and he himself was almost kidnapped.

Together with Octavio Getino, Solanas wrote the manifesto "Toward a Third Cinema". The idea of a political Third Cinema, opposed to Hollywood cinema and European auteur cinema, inspired film makers in many so-called developing countries.

Solanas went into exile in Paris in 1976, only returning to Argentina with the arrival of democracy in 1983.

Political career

Solanas continued to make political films and was an outspoken critic of Carlos Menem, the Argentine President. Three days after such a public criticism, on 21 May 1991, Solanas was shot six times in his legs. Those responsible were never caught but Solanas always thought that Menem was behind it.[4] Despite dealing with the attack and disability, Solanas became even more involved in politics and stood to be a Senator for Buenos Aires, receiving 7% of the vote in 1992. A year later he was elected a National Deputy for the Frente Grande list, although he left the party after a year.

Solanas continued to write and direct, including the 2005 film La Dignidad de los Nadies and the 2008 film La última estación. His son, Juan Solanas, is also a noted film director.

In October 2007, Solanas was a presidential candidate in the 2007 Argentine general election for the Authentic Socialist Party. He became the 5th most voted candidate, with 1.58% of the vote.

In 2009, Solanas was elected as a National Deputy for the city of Buenos Aires in the June 28th parliamentary elections, as his party Proyecto Sur attained the second largest political representation in the city by collecting 24.2% of the votes. In 2013, Solanas was elected National Senator, representing Buenos Aires City from 2013 to 2019.

In 2018 Solanas was vehemently for the legalization of abortion, claiming that sexual pleasure is a "fundamental human right".[5]

In 2019, following the end of his term as senator, he was appointed as Argentina's ambassador to UNESCO; he served in the position until his death from COVID-19 in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France, on 6 November 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic in France.[1]

Filmography

Accolades

Awards and Nominations [6] !Ceremony!Year!Category!Results
Venice Film Festival1985Grand Special Jury PrizeWon
1998CinemAvvenire Award (Best Film in Competition)Won
Golden LionNominated
UNESCO Award - Special MentionWon
2005Award of the City of Rome (Best Film)Won
Doc/It AwardWon
Human Rights Film Network AwardWon
Montréal World Film Festival2001Grand Prix Special des AmériquesWon
Mar del Plata Film Festival2004Best FilmNominated
Mannheim-Heidelberg International Filmfestival1968Interfilm AwardWon
Havana Film Festival2007Special Jury Prize (Documentary)Won
2005Memoria Documentary AwardWon
Saúl Yelín AwardWon
1998CARACOL AwardWon
Honorary AwardWon
Saúl Yelín AwardWon
1992Special Jury PrizeWon
1988Grand Coral - First PrizeWon
1985Grand Coral - First PrizeWon
Gramado Film Festival1992Golden Kikito (Best Ibero-American Film (Melhor Filme)Nominated
Cannes Film Festival1992Golden PalmNominated
Prize of the Ecumenical Jury - Special MentionWon
Technical Grand PrizeWon
1990Audience AwardWon
1989Audience AwardWon
1988Best DirectorWon
Golden PalmNominated
British Film Institute Awards1972Sutherland TrophyWon
Berlin International Film Festival2004Honorary Golden Berlin BearWon
1971FIPRESCI Prize - Special MentionWon
Argentinean Film Critics Association Awards2010Silver Condor (Best Documentary Feature (Mejor Largometraje Documental))Nominated
2009Silver Condor (Best Documentary Feature (Mejor Largometraje Documental))Nominated
Silver Condor (Best Editing (Mejor Montaje))Nominated
Silver Condor (Best Screenplay, Documentary (Mejor Guión Largometraje Documental))Nominated
2008Silver Condor (Best Documentary Feature (Mejor Largometraje Documental))Nominated
2006Silver Condor (Best Documentary (Mejor Documental))Nominated
Silver Condor (Best Screenplay, Documentary (Mejor Guión Documental))Nominated
2005Silver Condor (Best Documentary (Mejor Largometraje Documental)Nominated
Silver Condor (Best Screenplay, Feature-Length Documentary (Mejor Guión Largometraje Documental))Nominated
1999Silver Condor (Best Director (Mejor Director))Nominated
1987Silver Condor (Best Director (Mejor Director))Won
Silver Condor (Best Music (Mejor Música))Won
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences of Argentina2009Award of the Argentinean Academy (Best Documentary)Nominated
2008Award of the Argentinean Academy (Best Documentary)Won

Quotes

"The possibility of making a new cinema completely outside the system depends on whether or not filmmakers can transform themselves from 'directors' into total filmmakers. And no one can become a total filmmaker without being a film technician, without being capable of handling the production."[7] "We realized that the important thing was not the film itself but that which the film provoked."[8]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Murió por coronavirus en París el político y cineasta Fernando "Pino" Solanas. Infobae. 7 November 2020. 4 December 2020. es.
  2. Web site: 21st Moscow International Film Festival (1999) . 2013-03-23 . MIFF . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130322163246/http://moscowfilmfestival.ru/miff34/eng/archives/?year=1999 . 2013-03-22 .
  3. Web site: Akomfrah . John . Fernando Solanas (1936-2020) . Sabzian .
  4. News: Politi . Daniel . Fernando Solanas, Argentine Filmmaker and Politician, Dies at 84 . The New York Times . 4 December 2020 . 8 December 2021.
  5. News: Politi . Daniel . Fernando Solanas, Argentine Filmmaker and Politician, Dies at 84 . The New York Times . 4 December 2020 . 8 December 2021.
  6. Web site: Fernando E. Solanas Awards - List of awards won by Fernando E. Solanas, including award nominations - FamousFix. 2021-12-08. FamousFix.com.
  7. Web site: Program in Film and Video . calarts.edu . 23 April 2011 .
  8. Web site: Quotes on Documentary . 6 December 2021.