Tatiana Huezo | |
Birth Name: | Tatiana Huezo Sánchez |
Birth Date: | 9 January 1972 |
Birth Place: | San Salvador, El Salvador |
Nationality: | Salvadoran and Mexican |
Occupation: | Film director |
Alma Mater: | Pompeu Fabra University |
Tatiana Huezo Sánchez (pronounced as /es-419/; born 9 January 1972) is a film director of Salvadoran and Mexican nationality, residing in Mexico. Her first film, (2011), a documentary about the Salvadoran Civil War, has been awarded internationally. In 2016 she premiered Tempestad, the story of two women who suffer the consequences of human trafficking in Mexico. It received the 2016 Fénix Award for Best Documentary. In 2021, she premiered her first fiction film, Noche de Fuego, a story about three young girls in Mexico on their path to examine their adolescence in a town dominated by drug trade and human trafficking.[1]
Born in El Salvador, Tatiana Huezo has lived in Mexico since she was four years old.[2] She graduated from the Centro de Capacitación Cinematográfica (CCC), where she has since taught classes.[3] In 2004 she completed a master's degree in creative documentary at Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona.[4]
After her first attempts—short films such as Arido (1992), Tiempo cáustico (1997), Familia (2004) or Sueño (2005)—she gained international renown with her first feature-length film, El lugar más pequeño (2011), presented as an international premiere at Visions du Réel in 2011 where it won the Grand Prix for the Best Feature-length Film.[5] Her documentary, El lugar más pequeño is a testimony to the experience of the civil war in El Salvador. It has received numerous awards and has been exhibited at more than 50 festivals around the world.[4]
In 2015 Huezo presented Ausencias, a 27-minute short film that recounts the pain of Lulu, a mother who loses her husband and son, who have disappeared due to organized crime.[6]
In her work, she has portrayed the impunity of people before justice and institutions, humanizing the victims. About Tempestad, Huezo said:
Tempestad, which received the 2016 Fénix Award for Best Documentary,[7] tells the true story of Mexican women Miryam Carvajal – who spent almost a year incarcerated in Matamoros prison, accused of human trafficking, a crime she did not commit – and Aldela Alvarado, who is looking for her missing daughter.[8] "What happens in Mexico is close to the civil war that is taking place in Central America," explains Huezo.
In 2021, after many years of focusing her craft on documentaries, Huezo premiered her first fiction feature, Noche de Fuego (2021). In a mountain town in Mexico, Ana, Paula and Maria live a childhood that oscillates between idyllic and dreadful, as they reach adolescence, they are faced with the growing pains of womanhood, and a threatening and cruel environment.[9] This film was based on the Jennifer Clement novel, Prayers for the Stolen (2012).[10] It premiered at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival and has received critical acclaim for its powerful storytelling and cinematography.
Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ariel Awards | Best Documentary Feature | El lugar más pequeño | [12] | ||
Best First Work | |||||
FIPRESCI Award - Special Mention | |||||
Best Latin-American Film | |||||
Cinema Eye Honors | Spotlight Award | ||||
Ariel Awards | Best Documentary Short | Ausencias | [13] | ||
Fénix Awards | Best Documentary | Tempestad | |||
International Emmy Awards | Best Documentary | [14] | |||
Ariel Awards | Best Picture | [15] | |||
Best Director | |||||
Best Original Screenplay | |||||
Best Documentary Feature | |||||
Best Film Editing | |||||
Cannes Film Festival | Un Certain Regard | Prayers for the Stolen | [16] | ||
Un Certain Regard - Special Mention | |||||
San Sebastián International Film Festival | Horizontes Latinos | [17] | |||
RTVE Otra Mirada Award | |||||
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards | Next Generation Award | [18] | |||
Best Latin-American Film | [19] | ||||
[20] | |||||
[21] | |||||
Independent Spirit Awards | [22] | ||||
Palm Springs International Film Festival | Young Cineastes Award | [23] | |||
FIPRESCI Prize for Best International Feature Film | |||||
Best Ibero-American Film | |||||
[24] | |||||
Ariel Awards | Best Picture | [25] | |||
Best Director | |||||
Best Adapted Screenplay | |||||
Best Ibero-American Film | [26] | ||||
Berlin International Film Festival | Golden Bear Plaque | The Echo | [27] | ||
Berlinale Documentary Film Award | [28] [29] | ||||
Encounters Award: Best Director | [30] | ||||