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The International Short Film Festival Cine a la Calle (Spanish: Festival Internacional de Cortometrajes Cine a la Calle or FICICA) is a film festival dedicated to short films. Organized by the Foundation Cine a la Calle in Barranquilla , Colombia , it takes place every year by early May, featuring around 200 short films from more than 30 countries.
¡Que viva la música! Carlos Moreno: Paulina Dávila, Christian Tappan, Nelson Camayo Alejandra Ávila, Juan Pablo Barragán, David Cantor: Drama, music: Also known as Liveforever. Colombian-Mexican co-production. Based on the book !Que viva la musica!. La niña de la buseta: Pedro Pio: Tania Torres, Juan Andrés Chacón: Drama, fiction: Anna
The Bogotá Film Festival (Spanish: Festival de Cine de Bogotá) is an annual international film festival held in Bogotá, Colombia, inaugurated in 1984. [1] It takes place in late October each year, with most films being in Spanish and very few in English.
The Colombian Academy of Cinematography Arts and Sciences was founded in December 2009. Currently, there are 450 members from thirteen categories: production, directing, acting, screenwriting, editing, cinematography, art direction, music, costume design, sound design, production design, makeup and visual effects.
The Cartagena Film Festival (Spanish: Festival Internacional de Cine de Cartagena de Indias), or FICCI, is a film festival held in Cartagena, Colombia, which focuses mainly on the promotion of Colombian television series, Latin American films and short films.
The city of Barranquilla serves as a major trade center for Colombia, housing the largest port in the country. With an estimated population of 1.2 million, every major company in the country keeps at least one major depot or distribution center in the urban areas, and most international brands utilize the port while having their logistic ...
A New York man was indicted Tuesday for allegedly hiring someone to kill his estranged husband, a wealthy art dealer, who was found brutally stabbed in Brazil last year.
In Colombia, Carlos Mayolo, Luis Ospina and Andrés Caicedo led an alternative movement that was to have lasting influence, founding the Grupo de Cali, which they called Caliwood and producing some films as leading exponents of the "New Latin American Cinema" of the 1960s and 1970s, including Oiga, Vea, The Vampires of Poverty (Ospina) and ...