Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Film premiere: Inside the Revolution - 16 April 2010
Premiere:
Inside the Revolution
A film by Pablo Navarrete
Alborada Films
Perth screening:
Organised by Australia-Venezuela Solidarity Network & Green Left Weekly.
$10/$7. Ph Barry 9299 6453, Alex 9218 9608, 0413 976 638.
www.venezuelasolidarity.org * www.greenleft.org.au
February 2009 marked 10 years since Hugo Chavez took office, following a landslide election victory, and launched his revolution to bring radical change to Venezuela. While wildly popular with many in the country, Chavez's policies and his strongly-worded criticisms of the U.S. government have also made him powerful enemies, both at home and abroad, especially in the media. Filmed in Caracas in November 2008, on the eve of the 10th anniversary of Chavez's controversial presidency, this feature-length documentary takes a journey into the heart of Venezuela's revolution to listen to the voices of the people driving the process forward.
"This is a rare film about Venezuela, a country in extraordinary transition. Watch this film because it is honest and fair and respectful of those who want to be told the truth about an epic attempt, flaws and all, to claim back the humanity of ordinary people." - John Pilger
All welcome. For more information, phone 9299 6453, 9218 9608, 0413 976 638.
Inside the Revolution: A Journey into the Heart of Venezuela Directed by Pablo Navarrete
Inside the Revolution
A journey into the heart of Venezuela
A film by Pablo Navarrete
Alborada Films
Perth screening:
6:30pm, Fri 16 April
Perth Activist Centre (15 / 5 Aberdeen St, East Perth - next to McIver station)Organised by Australia-Venezuela Solidarity Network & Green Left Weekly.
$10/$7. Ph Barry 9299 6453, Alex 9218 9608, 0413 976 638.
www.venezuelasolidarity.org * www.greenleft.org.au
February 2009 marked 10 years since Hugo Chavez took office, following a landslide election victory, and launched his revolution to bring radical change to Venezuela. While wildly popular with many in the country, Chavez's policies and his strongly-worded criticisms of the U.S. government have also made him powerful enemies, both at home and abroad, especially in the media. Filmed in Caracas in November 2008, on the eve of the 10th anniversary of Chavez's controversial presidency, this feature-length documentary takes a journey into the heart of Venezuela's revolution to listen to the voices of the people driving the process forward.
"This is a rare film about Venezuela, a country in extraordinary transition. Watch this film because it is honest and fair and respectful of those who want to be told the truth about an epic attempt, flaws and all, to claim back the humanity of ordinary people." - John Pilger
All welcome. For more information, phone 9299 6453, 9218 9608, 0413 976 638.
REVIEWThe Venezuelan people: masters of revolution
Review by Derek Wall
12 February 2010Inside the Revolution: A Journey into the Heart of Venezuela Directed by Pablo Navarrete
If you think you know everything about Venezuela, well, think again. Pablo Navarrete’s documentary Inside the Revolution: A Journey into the Heart of Venezuela is a very thoughtful look at 10 years of change since Hugo Chavez’s election in 1998.
You won’t find “Chavez the hero” or “Chavez the villain” here — there’s less of Chavez than in most portraits of the country.
The film trades on ambiguity and contradiction. Venezuela has long been the “magical country”, with oil wealth shaping social development in unpredictable ways.
Gabriel Garcia Marquez wrote novels such as Love in the Time of Cholera, based on astonishing events on the Caribbean coast that Venezuela shares with Colombia.
The biggest contradiction of all is that Venezuela, a country known for its love of Big Macs, baseball and all things American, has led global opposition to George Bush’s foreign policy, the Washington Consensus and the US-shaped New World Order.
For 50 years,Venezuela was run by an increasingly corrupt elite, rotating power between the two main political parties — Accion Democratica (social democrats) and COPEI (christian democrats).
In 1989 during the “Caracazo” hundreds of people were killed and thousands injured, as police fired on protesters mobilising against International Monetary Fund (IMF)-inspired spending cuts. It was Latin America’s Tiananmen Square, but unlike Tiananmen, it received virtually no attention outside the country at the time.
Chavez, then a young army officer, rebelled against the killings and mounted a coup to protect citizens from the military assault. He famously surrendered on national television and radio, but only “por ahora” (for now). After imprisonment and then a pardon, he won the presidency in 1998.
Chavez’s victory ended the old two-party era and, though he initially proclaimed a brand of “third way” politics, he later moved sharply to the left.
The traditional elite, strongly aided by the US, mounted a full-scale assault on his government, culminating in a 2002 coup where he was temporarily removed from power.
Inside the Revolution argues that despite the ambiguities, the world’s media looks at Venezuela from the perspective of the “folks on the hill”, the wealthy and well connected elite. The changes in Venezuela threaten them, and they are in constant revolt, while the perspective of the majority of Venezuelans is ignored.
Even the so-called liberal press finds it easier to go to the relatively well-heeled parts of the country rather than talk to the people of the barrios (poor neighbourhoods), peasant farmers or indigenous people.
This film talks to the people: farmers, community organisers and — most of all — the hip-hop revolution artist “Master”.
Such accounts displace Chavez from his pedestal and put the people at the centre. The Venezuelan people — especially those excluded from influence — revolted against the IMF cuts, swept away the corrupt governing parties, pushed the present government in more radical directions and put Chavez in power, even rescuing him during the coup.
While the film corrects the avalanche of elite commentary on Venezuela, it’s also unsparing in its criticisms of the corruption, crime and concentrations of power that remain in the country.
In one bit of electric footage, Master and his rappers play to Chavez, slipping in an unscheduled number to rap out to the president, standing just feet away, the failings of his government. You will have to watch for yourself to see his reaction.
Capitalism is increasingly in crisis: the financial catastrophe and recession are only part of its failings. People are looking for an alternative, and this film contains an interesting discussion of what 21st century socialism could mean.
This is socialism with direct democracy, Marx, the Latin American leader Simon Bolivar, radical Christianity, free software, anarchism and much else in the mix.
Master notes somewhere at the beginning of the film that “culture is the train ideologies travel by”. Have a good trip — we are entering new territory.
[Review republished from Green Left Weekly issue #826. Originally from Red Pepper.]
You won’t find “Chavez the hero” or “Chavez the villain” here — there’s less of Chavez than in most portraits of the country.
The film trades on ambiguity and contradiction. Venezuela has long been the “magical country”, with oil wealth shaping social development in unpredictable ways.
Gabriel Garcia Marquez wrote novels such as Love in the Time of Cholera, based on astonishing events on the Caribbean coast that Venezuela shares with Colombia.
The biggest contradiction of all is that Venezuela, a country known for its love of Big Macs, baseball and all things American, has led global opposition to George Bush’s foreign policy, the Washington Consensus and the US-shaped New World Order.
For 50 years,Venezuela was run by an increasingly corrupt elite, rotating power between the two main political parties — Accion Democratica (social democrats) and COPEI (christian democrats).
In 1989 during the “Caracazo” hundreds of people were killed and thousands injured, as police fired on protesters mobilising against International Monetary Fund (IMF)-inspired spending cuts. It was Latin America’s Tiananmen Square, but unlike Tiananmen, it received virtually no attention outside the country at the time.
Chavez, then a young army officer, rebelled against the killings and mounted a coup to protect citizens from the military assault. He famously surrendered on national television and radio, but only “por ahora” (for now). After imprisonment and then a pardon, he won the presidency in 1998.
Chavez’s victory ended the old two-party era and, though he initially proclaimed a brand of “third way” politics, he later moved sharply to the left.
The traditional elite, strongly aided by the US, mounted a full-scale assault on his government, culminating in a 2002 coup where he was temporarily removed from power.
Inside the Revolution argues that despite the ambiguities, the world’s media looks at Venezuela from the perspective of the “folks on the hill”, the wealthy and well connected elite. The changes in Venezuela threaten them, and they are in constant revolt, while the perspective of the majority of Venezuelans is ignored.
Even the so-called liberal press finds it easier to go to the relatively well-heeled parts of the country rather than talk to the people of the barrios (poor neighbourhoods), peasant farmers or indigenous people.
This film talks to the people: farmers, community organisers and — most of all — the hip-hop revolution artist “Master”.
Such accounts displace Chavez from his pedestal and put the people at the centre. The Venezuelan people — especially those excluded from influence — revolted against the IMF cuts, swept away the corrupt governing parties, pushed the present government in more radical directions and put Chavez in power, even rescuing him during the coup.
While the film corrects the avalanche of elite commentary on Venezuela, it’s also unsparing in its criticisms of the corruption, crime and concentrations of power that remain in the country.
In one bit of electric footage, Master and his rappers play to Chavez, slipping in an unscheduled number to rap out to the president, standing just feet away, the failings of his government. You will have to watch for yourself to see his reaction.
Capitalism is increasingly in crisis: the financial catastrophe and recession are only part of its failings. People are looking for an alternative, and this film contains an interesting discussion of what 21st century socialism could mean.
This is socialism with direct democracy, Marx, the Latin American leader Simon Bolivar, radical Christianity, free software, anarchism and much else in the mix.
Master notes somewhere at the beginning of the film that “culture is the train ideologies travel by”. Have a good trip — we are entering new territory.