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On 6/2/22, 9:41 AM, "LA Filmforum" <[email protected]> wrote:

 

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Juan Sebastián Bollaín:
A Most Wanted Idea of Utopia
Two programs of works
never seen in the US!
Online June 4-19
 

Los Angeles Filmforum presents
Juan Sebastián Bollaín: A Most Wanted Idea of Utopia
Two programs of works never seen in the US
Online June 4-19
Live Conversation with guest curator Elena Duque on Sunday June 12, 1 pm 
Pacific Time
 
U.S. premieres!  Newly subtitled films!
Curated by Elena Duque.  Introductory prerecorded videos with Juan Sebastián 
Bollaín!
 
Ticketing for Juan Sebastián Bollaín: A Most Wanted Idea of Utopia, program 1
Sliding Scale, requested $12 for general admission, $8 students/seniors, $0 for 
Filmforum members, here
Includes admission to program 2 as well!
 
Ticketing for Juan Sebastián Bollaín: A Most Wanted Idea of Utopia, program 2
Sliding Scale, requested $12 for general admission, $8 students/seniors, $0 for 
Filmforum members, here

 Register in advance for the conversation with Elena Duque on June 12 here:
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information 
about joining the meeting.
 
JUAN SEBASTIÁN BOLLAÍN. A MOST WANTED IDEA OF UTOPIA
By Elena Duque
Self-taught filmmaker and architect, Juan Sebastián Bollaín has been making 
films since the 60s, mixing his two study disciplines along the years in a 
series of films that reinvent the urbanism of the most traditional and 
religious city in Spain: Seville, Andalusia, the heart of the Spanish clichés, 
Holy Week and flamenco. Using super 8 and various tricks and montage 
strategies, he made at the end of the 70's a series of imaginative visions of 
the city, delirious utopias full of sense of humor, surrealist and poignant 
images and lucid ideas that shake the core of the ideas about the city. A cult 
figure of Spanish Cinema whose work has been recently digitized and restored, a 
most wanted idea of utopia in these dystopian and strange times.
 
Born in Madrid in 1945, and a Sevillan citizen from a very early age, Juan 
Sebastián Bollaín is a filmmaker, architect and urban planner. He has also 
worked as a teacher and book editor. All these professions revolve around his 
interest in architecture and his idea of a better way of inhabiting the city. 
He began making films at 14 years old, and he directed several amateur fictions 
and documentaries. In the late 70s he made some of his most important films: 
the essay film La Alameda ‘78, a commission from the Architecture School in 
Seville, the futurist fiction C.A.7.9., under the auspices of Cádiz 
Architecture School, and his tetralogy “Dreaming of Sevilla”, four humourous 
and delirious super 8 pieces on an utopian Seville that were part of a big 
project that also included a written research. Besides making these kinds of 
works, he has written and directed several feature length fiction films, tv 
series and commissioned documentaries, while continuing his work as an 
architect designing buildings and making urban plannings. He lives and works in 
Seville.
 
Notes by guest curator Elena Duque. 
Special thanks to Ramón Benítez, Filmoteca de Andalucía, Junta de Andalucía; 
Kate Brown, Marta Fernández Gómez, Rocío Mesa, and L.A. OLA
 
For more information: www.lafilmforum.org or 323-377-7238.
 

SEVILLA 2030 (Juan Sebastián Bollaín, 2003, 28 min.) US Premiere!

 

Screening:

PROGRAM 1- SEVILLE, THE BEST PLACE TO LIVE
In this first program, we will see four films devoted to imagining a brave new 
crazy and marvellous city, guided by hedonism and a peculiar sense of 
community. The best place to live in the world.
 
TETRALOGY “DREAMING OF SEVILLE”
Composed of the films:
Sevilla tuvo que ser (Juan Sebastián Bollaín, 1979, 10 min.)
Sevilla en tres niveles (Juan Sebastián Bollaín, 1979, 9 min.)
Sevilla rota (Juan Sebastián Bollaín, 1979, 12 min.)
La ciudad en el recuerdo (Juan Sebastián Bollaín, 1979, 14 min.)
This foundational tetralogy shot in super 8 depicts a delirious and amazing 
Sevilla, in a subversive response to the living conditions in the city at the 
end of the 70s. Using various styles, such as mockumentary, avant garde and 
surrealist fiction and also more impressionistic visions, a compendium of what 
the city is and could be. Sevilla tuvo que ser is a “found” reportage of the 
American television telling to the world the progressive vision of Seville 
citizens: from the broadcast of the porn week in the billboards of the city to 
the monuments devoted to the “café con leche” (coffee with milk) and to the 
glass of bear. Sevilla en tres niveles is also a fake reportage that depicts 
the illusory division in the city in three levels: the outsiders and criminals 
live in peace in the roofs of the city, the workers and capitalism slaves, 
stressed and fast, live at the street level. In the underground, there is a 
Seville of the past, with people of ancient times still living there. Sevilla 
rota is a surrealist fiction in which marvelous montages take us to a place 
where you can see the sea at turning a corner, or in which the cars circulate 
in the sidewalks and people are drinking in the middle of the street. Finally, 
La ciudad en el recuerdo begins as a “symphony of the city”, showing its 
rhythms and light in poetic time lapses, ending with a tough critique on 
marketing and capitalism taking over the city.
 
SEVILLA 2030 (Juan Sebastián Bollaín, 2003, 28 min.)
Twenty years later, Bollaín comes back from an Ugandan satellite to revise the 
Utopian Seville he described in his tetralogy. In this new city everything can 
happen: turning the Seville Cathedral in an olympic pool, or living in a city 
in which citizens participate actively in making it the funniest and most 
liveable place in the world.
 
PROGRAM 2. THE CITY TURNED UPSIDE DOWN
Two films in which Bollaín reflects on urgent urbanistic problems using 
different and imaginative approaches.
 
LA ALAMEDA ‘78  (Juan Sebastián Bollaín, 1978, 40 min.)
La Alameda is an emblematic place of Seville, a popular neighborhood degraded 
but at the same time full of life. In the face of an urbanistic project that 
planned to destroy the neighborhood to build new apartments (the menace of 
gentrification before the term was a common place), Bollaín received a 
commission from the Architecture School to document La Alameda before the 
disaster (that finally never happened). In an intelligent montage of sound and 
image, Bollaín reproduces the life of the neighborhood, its history and 
idiosyncrasy, mixing it with some bold cinematic movements: depicting the 
making of the films, and imagining and showing metaphorical performances that 
talk with eloquence of the problems of the city, and criticizes the predatory 
politics over the lives of the citizens.
 
C.A.7.9. UN ENIGMA DE FUTURO (Juan Sebastián Bollaín, 1979, 30 min.)
After the commission related to La Alameda, Bollaín received a new commission 
to revise yet another urbanistic plan through cinema. This time, he deals with 
the expansion of Cádiz, an Andalusian coastal city near Seville. The city is 
located in a very thin ism, making it very difficult to respond to the growth 
of the population because of the lack of terrains. This time he uses a sort of 
science fiction approach: in the year 4.000, when the city of Cádiz has already 
disappeared a long time ago, a group of archaeologists try to reconstruct what 
happened to the city using “old” documents, trying to grasp what lead the city 
to the disaster.
 
Elena Duque - Guest Curator
Spanish-Venezuelan Elena Duque is a filmmaker, programmer, writer and teacher. 
She currently programmes and directs the editorial department of (S8) Mostra de 
Cinema Periférico in A Coruña and she is an associate programmer at the Seville 
European Film Festival. She is a professor at the Camilo José Cela University 
in Madrid and she teaches workshops and gives lectures in different 
institutions and master degrees. She has also made several animated and 
experimental short films.

 
 

  
 

----------------------
Los Angeles Filmforum screenings are supported by the Los Angeles County Board 
of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Department of Arts & Culture, the 
Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles, the National Endowment for 
the Arts, the Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts the Academy of Motion Picture 
Arts & Sciences, and the Getty Foundation through the California Community 
Foundation.. We also depend on our members, ticket buyers, and individual 
donors.
 
Los Angeles Filmforum is the city’s longest-running organization dedicated to 
weekly screenings of experimental film, documentaries, video art, and 
experimental animation. 2022 is our 47th year.
 
Coming Soon:
June 26 - Actual/Virtual Realities: Harun Farocki’s Parallel & Related Visions, 
in person
Late June - Womanhouse, online!

Memberships available, $75 single, $125 dual, $225 Silver Nitrate, or $40 
single student.
Contact us at [email protected].
Find us online at http://lafilmforum.org.
Become a fan on Facebook and follow us on Twitter @LosAngFilmforum! and on 
Instagram at #LAFilmforum

 

 

 

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