Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Handcuffs (end of March 2015)

Another scene we've shot in Jerez this time for Flamenco:  the Land Is Still Fertile (Flamenco:  la tierra está viva) will accompany a letra of cante - a verse of singing - this one a verse of carceleras (prison songs) sung by Antonio Agujetas.  As with the scene in the bar (SEE the previous post), the purpose of this scene is to bring the verse to life for those who don't understand Spanish.


Antonio de la Malena explains the scene to the two actors - two brothers.

Antonio Agujetas sings that his jailor wouldn't take his handcuffs off until he promised to give him his ring - the ring that "you gave me," that he always kept on the table by the bed at night.

In our scene, once again almost in silhouette, we see two pairs of wrists and hands.  One of the people is handcuffed, the other has a key and is wearing a uniform.  (He's the guard, ok?)  The one with the key unlocks the handcuffs, takes them off, and the prisoner then takes off his ring and gives it to the guard.

The handcuffs.

We had a lot of trouble with light in shooting this, but I think on the last take it came out ok.  I won't really look to see until co-director Antonio de la Malena gets back from France, since this is a joint effort, but I do believe what we have will work.

One brother looks like he's not so sure about all this.

But after our "prisoner" and our "guard" had left, I realized that you never clearly saw the ring, so I had Antonio pose as the guard, complete with the uniform jacket, and I shot an extreme close-up of the palm of his hand and his wrist...and in the palm of his hand was the ring.  This should make the point.

After the shoot, one of the brothers wanted to be dressed up like a general.

The ring in question, by the way, is the same ring we used in the pawn shop scene of Domino:  Caught in the Crisis (Dominó:  agarrado por la crisis).  It's my ring;  and it's getting to be a FAMOUS ring.

The co-directors enjoying the acting.  (Note that I'm doing
double duty as camera person again!  Saves money.)
I should mention that we have Raul of Fotógrafos Juan to thank for these great photos.

And you may be interested to know that my work will be in three different festivals in April.   Want to keep up with what we're doing?  Sign up for our monthly newsletter HERE.

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Eve A. Ma is in Spain where, having completed the revised Afro-Peruvian documentary, she is getting back to work on a documentary about flamenco which she is co-directing with Antonio de la Malena.  

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Three festivals in April

My work will be screened in three festivals in the month of April.

The first up is the hour-long drama Domino:  Caught in the Crisis (Dominó:  agarrado por la crisis) which will screen in the Oakland International Film Festival at 9:00am on April 5 in the Black Repertory Theater venue (3201 Adeline St., Berkeley, CA., USA).

Next will be my short, The Blacksmith, which will screen in the Bare Bones Film and Music Festival at 5:00pm on April 10 in the Three Rivers Museum venue (220 Elgin, Muskogee, OK, USA).

And last but not least is the revised version of the hour-long documentary, A Zest for Life:  Afro-Peruvian Rhythms, a Source of Latin Jazz.  This version includes material I shot on my recent (Dec. 2014) trip to Peru.  It will screen in the Festival International du Film PanAfricain in Cannes, France. The festival runs from April 29-May 3.  The exact date and time will be finalized on April 7, at which time I'll update this page.

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Eve A. Ma is in Spain where, having completed the revised Afro-Peruvian documentary, she has gotten back to work on a documentary about flamenco that she is co-directing with Antonio de la Malena.  

Thursday, April 2, 2015

The bar scene ( end Mar. 2015)

Ok, I came here to shoot material for our documentary Flamenco:  the Land Is Still Fertile (Flamenco:  la tierra está viva)...and I'll tell you about one of the things we've done.  ("We" means me and co-director Antonio de la Malena.)  It's a scene we shot in a bar, almost in silhouette.  But first, let me give you some background:

Last summer, we shot a very fine singer, Manuel Moneo, singing one of the deepest and more tragic flamenco forms called seguiriyas.  He was accompanied by his grandson, el Barrullito, a fine young guitarist who had recently been diagnosed with cancer.  The grandson has since passed away.

Manuel Moneo accompanied by his grandson, el Barrullito

When we interviewed Manuel Moneo, he said that when he sang, he thought about all the hard times and tragedies that his parents went through.  I can't but imagine that he also thought about his talented  young grandson having been diagnosed with cancer.

That, and the recent death of one of his brothers, who led a tragic life.

Out of what Moneo sang, we chose one verse that we absolutely will use in Flamenco:  the Land Is Still Fertile.  Part of it is in the trailer.  In this verse, Moneo sings that sometimes he is so overcome with sorrow that it makes him angry just to have to talk to people.  He sings the verse with great depth and conviction...and is beautifully accompanied.

Setting up to shoot Moneo last summer.
We are well aware that many people, especially if they don't speak Spanish, find flamenco singing to be somewhat inaccessible, so we decided to put a scene over part of Moneo's singing.  Not all of it - we want you to see him sing - but part of it, to help illustrate the verse.

And now, back to the scene which we shot last week;  remember, it's almost in silhouette.

The friends in the bar.
We see a bunch of friends in a bar, drinking beer, talking, and laughing.   The bar tender is in the background.

A lone man who looks rather like Moneo enters from the street.  He passes the guys, who greet him and invite him to join them.  He refuses, rather abruptly and rudely, and goes to the far end of the bar.  When the bar tender comes over, he points to what is obviously a drink he's had many times before.  It comes in a bottle that is clearly some kind of whiskey, or rum.

Our lone man, Luis de Pacote (posing as Manuel Moneo).
The bar tender pours him a shot.  He drinks it down in one gulp, then indicates to the bar tender that he wants another.  The bar tender pours him another, which he looks at for a moment, then drinks it down in one gulp.  The bar tender goes off to serve the group of friends more beer.

Our lone man turns and starts to walk out of the door on the far side of the bar.  Halfway to the door, he stops, turns around, returns to the counter, slaps down some money, then turns again and leaves by the far door.

End of scene.

Here we are, preparing to shoot.  Due to miscommunication,
the other camera operator couldn't come, so we shot with a
skeleton crew:  the two co-directors (with me doing double
duty as camera person) and one additional assistant.
While we're working steadily on this documentary, due to lack of funds it's SLOWLY and steadily.  In the meantime, you may be interested to learn that other of my films will be in three different festivals in April.  

 Want to keep up with what we're doing?  Sign up for our monthly newsletter HERE.

_________________
Eve A. Ma is in Spain where, having completed the revised Afro-Peruvian documentary, she has gotten back to work on a documentary about flamenco that she is co-directing with Antonio de la Malena.  


Saturday, March 28, 2015

Election results

Ok, since I brought up the topic of elections:

In the elections for the region of Andalucía that took place last Sunday, the PSOE (Socialist party) got 47% of the vote;  the PP (the conservatives...they are in power in the national government) got 33%, a new party called Podemos (Yes We Can) got 15% - lower than expected - and other parties got 5% or lower.

The PSOE was in power in 2008 when the economic crisis began, and was thrown out in reaction to that crisis.  They also have been accused of corruption.  An important part of their influence comes from the labor unions.

The PP took power in almost all of Spain when the PSOE was voted out.  They are now being accused of corruption.  Their power comes more from the financial sector.

Podemos was founded a few months ago by a university professor, who is also the party's candidate for the position of prime minister.  THAT vote will come later on this year.  Its most important goal is to end the austerity imposed by the PP (under prompting by the Germans and the bank of the European Union).

And enough of politics.  The next post will move on to other topics.
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Eve A. Ma is in Spain where, having completed the revised Afro-Peruvian documentary, she is getting back to work on a documentary about flamenco.  Subscribe HERE to our monthly newsletter to keep up with her work.

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Consequences-Tale of the Burning Containers (end Mar. 2015)

In the last blog, I talked about elections and hiring people when you couldn't afford to pay them.

What are some of the consequences of doing that?  Well, other than really messing up the lives of the people working for you, here's a little story about consequences.

Color-coded containers:  olive green is for garbage.

Half a block from my apartment in Jerez de la Frontera (Spain) is a set of containers:  one for plastic recyclables, one for paper trash, one for glass recycling, and one for garbage.  (Here, you take out your own garbage;  the garbage truck comes every night to empty the big garbage container.)

There's another set of similar containers about two blocks away, etc., etc..

Yellow is for recycling plastic.  What's behind that ugly blue
wall?  A construction site where work stopped 5 years ago.

Or rather, up until a couple of days ago, this is the way it was.

But yesterday afternoon, when I went out with my bag full of paper trash, the paper trash container had disappeared!  The glass recycling container was gone as well.

Missing!  grey container for paper recycling, bright green
container (rounded at the top) for glass

...but not the garbage container or the plastic recycling container.

SO--I walked with my bulging bag of paper trash the two blocks to the other set of containers.  Both the paper trash and the glass recycling containers had disappeared!  Extraordinary!

I had to bring my bulging bag home, where it still is.

This morning, when I went out for a brief run-walk, I looked around at other places where I'd expect to find paper trash and glass recycling containers.  There were none to be found,

When a friend dropped by later on, I asked him about this.  He told me that "they" had burned them up and taken them away!

The containers two blocks away;  notice the big space
between them where the MISSING containers used to be.

I asked him what he meant.  He said he saw the paper recycling container near his house in flames, and called the police to let them know.  They gave him the brush-off.  He walked to the next paper recycling container with his paper trash, and it was on fire as well.  This time, he didn't  call the police.

In total, that day, he saw five of these containers on fire.  A little while later he saw a truck come by and pick up all the burned containers as well as the glass recycling containers.  Now, when he wants to recycle, he has to go in his car to where his sister lives, and where there are still containers.

He finished his story by explaining he assumes the recycling people burned up the containers because city hall isn't paying them.

Bad, bad, BAD city hall.  (NOTE:  the people in
uniforms are city police, chewing the fat.  It's not THEIR fault.)

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Eve A. Ma is in Spain where, having completed the revised Afro-Peruvian documentary, she is getting back to work on a documentary about flamenco.  Subscribe HERE to our monthly newsletter to keep up with her work.

Saturday, March 21, 2015

Election time in Spain (Mar. 21, 2015)

Spain is divided into municipalities, counties, regions, and the nation.  There are elections for all these different levels of government except for the counties.

Elections for the region of Andalucia, where I am located, take place tomorrow while municipal elections for all the cities in Spain, and most (but not all) of the other regions are going to be held in May.  The national elections must take place before December 20, but no specific date has been set.

Elections in Spain always take place on a Sunday, so as to make it more convenient for people to get to the polling stations.

I have been told by a (hopefully reliable) source that the city recently hired 200 workers.  This is to lower the unemployment rate and also make 200 people plus their families very happy.  One fly in this ointment is that the city doesn't have the money to pay these people.  When their contracts are up (after the May elections), they will be told, sorry, the city purse is empty.

bad, bad city hall

The same source heard from some city workers that their pay was docked at the end of last month by 50 euros each...the reason being that the city doesn't have the money to pay them all it owes them.  These workers can, of course, quit their jobs in protest, but then they would be unemployed.

So it goes.

The business about hiring 200 new workers reminds me of something from when Ronald Reagan was governor.  During his two terms, he secured income tax rebates four separate times.   The most famous one was in 1973.  As I remember it, however (but I can't find any references to confirm this), the first one was very near the end of his first term, when he was running for the second one, ensuring that many people got a check in the mail from the State of California shortly before going to the polls.

And THAT reminds me of growing up in New Orleans, where everyone was aways paying off everyone else.  Huey P. Long comes to mind, but there were plenty of others.

The more the world changes, the more it stays the same?
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Eve A. Ma is in Spain where, having completed the revised Afro-Peruvian documentary, she is getting back to work on a documentary about flamenco.  Subscribe HERE to our monthly newsletter to keep up with her work.