SFCINEMATHEQUE

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Thursday, April 6, 2017, 8:45 pm

El Mar La Mar

presented in association with the San Francisco International Film Festival

SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF MODERN ART

151 Third Street (between Mission & Howard Streets)

San Francisco, CA 94103





presented in association with San Francisco International Film Festival and the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive

Admission: $15 General Admission/$14 Students and Seniors/$13 Cinematheque Members
note: Cinematheque Members please email christine@sfcinematheque.org for discount ticket code.
Advance tickets here.

This program also screens on April 12th at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Screening Room and April 16th at the Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley. Information here.

A timely and altogether mesmerizing portrait of place filmed in 16mm, Joshua Bonnetta and J.P. Sniadecki’s lyrical documentary is best described as being from, rather than about, the Sonoran desert. The US-Mexico border looms as an unspoken presence, the better to train our attention on the landscape’s primordial drama: hillsides burning through the night, bats flooding a cave, and a borderless sky—and deadly lack of shade—in all directions. The enveloping soundtrack is itself an epic poem of wind, gunshots, helicopters, and radio signals. Nestled into this sensory detail are firsthand accounts of the borderlands and its crossings. Crucially, the speakers are not named, credentialed, or even pictured; periodically the image goes black, and we find ourselves listening to their stories as if around the campfire. Haunted by things left unseen and people left behind, El Mar La Mar gives every impression of walking hallowed ground even as it recognizes its own complex kinship to the activists, border agents, and self-appointed patrollers following the tracks of migrants. Refreshingly, though, Bonnetta and Sniadecki’s patient filmmaking suggests that we reserve judgments until we know something of the terrain.—Max Goldberg