On Tuesday, the Center for the Arts in San Luis Potosi Centennial Cineclub through the Center for Art and Technology Nuveas (SING), will conduct a double-feature film in the cycle Reevolución, that this time presents two documentaries which script is performed around the figure of the famous revolutionary leader Pancho Villa.
"The lost scrolls of Pancho Villa" (2003), is the first of these documentaries in which is told in first person, the search for a full movie about Pancho Villa, following Gregory Rocha, director of the documentary, found fifteen rolls in the Library of Congress in Washington DC, with images of this legendary Mexican revolutionary, and these were filmed by a producer.
This documentary includes the participation in the script, direction and photography of Gregory Rocha, as well as the music of Horacio Uribe and Group Lauds, editing by Craig Anderl, testimony of Kevin Brownlow, Ruben Osorio, Fernando Gonzalez del Moral, Stephen Bottomore Paolo Cherchi Usai and-. The vocesde Michael Douglas, Mark Kolody, Gregorio Rocha and Antonio Zuniga.
For its part, the film "Pancho Villa, the revolution is not over," is a documentary made in 2006 by Francesco Taboada Tabone, which exposes the testimonies of former combatants Villistas to share with us their experiences alongside Pancho Villa and his own idea what was Villismo during the Mexican Revolution. With the participation of: Ernesto Nava Villa Juana Maria, Guadalupe Villa, Ana Maria Zapata, Diego Zapata and veterans of the legendary Northern Division.
The overview discusses the early hours of March 16, 1916, when Pancho Villa invaded the town of Columbus, thus perpetuating the first invasion of American territory by a Latin American army. That same day, a child born in Durango named Villa Ernesto Ramirez, proud son of General Francisco Villa.
A leader's death, his mother took him to live in America and said, "Never tell anybody who is your father, because they kill us." Eighty-three years later, the old Ernesto returns to earth to discover that the General his father is now one of the moral leaders of the peasants in Mexico and a national hero.
The invitation is for the general public on Tuesday 28 September at 17:00 and 19:00 pm in the SING Teleaula. Presentation and discussion at the beginning of the end of the film. Free admission by presenting general admission ticket CASLPC. More information at 1 37 41 00 extension 7003, in the area of SING or visit www.centrodelasartesslp.gob.mx