A cinema industry without spectators: Theorizing about the public for the New Latin American cinema in the Sixties

Un cine sin espectadores: La teorización sobre el público en el Nuevo Cine Latinoamericano de los sesenta

Silveira, Germán
Detalles Bibliográficos
2015
New Latin American Cinema
Cinematographic Audience
Audience Cultivation
Anti-colonialist Cinema
Film Reception
Nuevo Cine Latinoamericano
público cinematográfico
formación de espectadores
cine anticolonialista
recepción
Español
Universidad Católica del Uruguay
LIBERI
https://revistas.ucu.edu.uy/index.php/revistadixit/article/view/684
https://hdl.handle.net/10895/3445
Acceso abierto
Resumen:
Sumario:Thorough studies on the New Latin American Cinema of the 1960s have mostly focused on issues such as ideology (a militant cinema), aesthetics (a cinema of poverty) and form (an imperfect cinema). However, a reflection upon the audience developed by the filmmakers has been strangely overlooked. This article aims to theorize on the public, thus rescuing one of the most under-researched aspects of this cinema. Through a critical reading of some texts such as manifestos, interviews and films, this work explores how this movement conceived of the public and the originality this perspective has brought to film history. The spectator was defined as an actor committed to the political changes that Cuban revolution inspired in the region, a spectator who was closer to the conflicts of his/her own historical time than to the comfort of the cinema seat.