|
El texto de esta página por ahora sólo se encuentra en
inglés. Si quieres averiguar sobre sitios que facilitan traducción
via Internet, entra aquí.
agosto 2005
Rolando
Klein's only feature film, Chac, developed a
strong reputation through word of mouth in the mid-1970s. After
graduating from UCLA's film school, Klein lived in Chiapas and
Yucatan in southern Mexico for two years, researching, writing
and directing Chac, a fictional work based on Mayan myth,
in which the Tzeltals of Tenejapa were actors. Chac premiered
at Filmex '75 in Los Angeles, and went on to win several awards:
Belgium's L'Age d'Or, Best Director and Best Feature at the Virgin
Islands Film Festival, Best Feature at the San Francisco Invitational
Film Festival and more. Klein left filmmaking until 2000, when
he worked for two years with a group of teen mothers in the inner-city
of Los Angeles as they made a documentary about their lives and
their children. Klein currently manages a manufacturing facility
in New Mexico. Born in Santiago, Chile, he graduated from the
University of Chile with a degree in industrial engineering.
"I must have been 11 or 12 when my dad let me borrow his
8mm camera to experiment with an unexposed roll of dated film.
The cowboy movie that I shot in our backyard with its crude animated
title sequence became a family classic and I was hooked for life.
It was fortunate to come of age at a time when movies, liberated
by lighter camera equipment and faster film speeds, allowed crews
to come out of the sound stage into the real world and a remarkable
generation of filmmakers emerged. Godard, Fellini, Truffaut, Costa-Gavras
and others inspired a whole generation of followers, me among
them."


Presentado por NMAI
- Chac (1974)
director, producer, writer

Créditos
Fotográficos: Rolando Klein - gentileza
del realizador
|
 |
 |
 |
|