THE WOMEN OF LATIN AND CENTRAL AMERICA
|
From immigration to civil wars to politics, women in Latin and Central America are continuing to fight not only for gender equality but often for the survival of themselves and their families. Portraits of these brave and determined women are portrayed in new releases like the dangerous journey to the promised land of the United States in MARIA IN NOBODY’S LAND and the unceasing search for missing children in CHILDREN OF MEMORY.
Special Offer! Purchase 5 films from this collection for only $495! Call 212-925-0606 x360 or email orders@wmm.com to purchase.
*Special offers exclude 2012/2013 Releases. For special offers, older films will be included in discount and 2012/2013 films will be priced at list.
|

films in this collection
|
|
DVD Sale |
$295.00 |
|
|
Download
Photo
Download Press Kit
|
|
The Blonds (Los Rubios)
A film by Albertina Carri, Produced by Barry Ellsworth
Albertina Carri’s second feature is a look at Argentina’s recent history from the perspective of a generation forced to mourn those of whom they have no recollection. Carri, who lost her parents to Argentina’s brutal military junta when she was three years old, travels through Buenos Aires with her crew to unravel the factual and emotional mysteries of her parents’ life, disappearance and death. Traces of Carri’s family emerge, colored by sharply conflicting perspectives. Who were the Carris? How did they disappear? Were they blonde, brunette, parents, heroes or merely a fiction of those who remember them?
More
|
|
|
DVD Sale |
$295.00 |
|
|
Download
Photo
|
|
Children of Memory (Niños de la Memoria)
A film by Kathryn Smith Pyle and María Teresa Rodríguez

Hundreds of children disappeared without a trace during the Salvadorian civil war. Many were survivors of massacres carried out by the U.S.-trained Salvadoran army. Taken away from the massacre sites by soldiers, some grew up in orphanages or were “sold” into adoption abroad, not knowing their true history or identity. The film follows Margarita Zamora, an investigator with human rights organization Pro-Búsqueda as she traverses the Salvadoran countryside probing memory, swabbing DNA samples, and searching for disappeared children - including her own four siblings. More
|
|
|
DVD Sale |
$295.00 |
|
|
Download
Photo
Download Press Kit
|
|
Everyone Their Grain of Sand
A film by Beth Bird
This award-winning documentary reveals the struggles of the citizens of Maclovio Rojas in Tijuana, Mexico as they battle the state government’s attempts to evict them from their homes to make way for multi-national corporations seeking cheap land and labor. Filmmaker Beth Bird followed the fiercely determined residents for three years as they persistently petitioned the state for basic services like running water, electricity and pay for their teachers, only to be met with bureaucratic stonewalling. Eventually, several community leaders are targeted for persecution, and one is arrested while others are forced into hiding.
More
 |
Los Angeles Film Festival, Jury Award Best Doc |
 |
San Diego Int'l FF, San Diego Feature Film Award |
|
|
|
DVD Sale |
$295.00 |
|
|
Download
Photo
|
|
La Cueca Sola
A film by Marilu Mallet
On September 11, 1973, a military coup in Chile brought Augusto Pinochet to power, and over the next 17 years, thousands of women and men were taken from their homes- never to return. Since that time, Chilean women have danced the country’s traditional courtship dance alone, and LA CUECA SOLA has become a symbol of women’s struggle against the dictatorship.
More
|
|
|
DVD Sale |
$295.00 |
|
|
Download
Photo
|
|
Maria in Nobody's Land
A film by Marcela Zamora Chamorro

MARIA IN NOBODY’S LAND is an unprecedented and intimate look at the illegal and extremely dangerous journey of three Salvadoran women to the United States, through Mexican territory. Doña Inés, a 60 year old woman, has been looking for her daughter for five years and is following the same route her daughter took while crossing Mexico en route to the United States. Marta and Sandra, tired of the violence from their husbands and wanting to overcome poverty, decide to leave their families behind to travel to America - with only thirty dollars in their pockets. More
|
|
|
DVD Sale |
$295.00 |
|
|
Download
Photo
Download Press Kit
|
|
Señorita Extraviada, Missing Young Woman
A film by Lourdes Portillo
SENORITA EXTRAVIADA, MISSING YOUNG WOMAN tells the haunting story of the more than 350 kidnapped, raped and murdered young women of Juárez, Mexico. Visually poetic, yet unflinching in its gaze, this compelling investigation unravels the layers of complicity that have allowed for the brutal murders of women living along the Mexico-U.S. border. In the midst of Juárez’s international mystique and high profile job market, there exists a murky history of grossly underreported human rights abuses and violence against women. The climate of violence and impunity continues to grow, and the murders of women continue to this day. More
 |
Sundance Film Festival - Special Jury Prize |
 |
Academy of C.A.S.-Mx.- Ariel, Best Mexican Doc. |
|
|
|
DVD Sale |
$295.00 |
|
|
Download
Photo
Download Press Kit
|
|
Thunder in Guyana
A film by Suzanne Wasserman
THUNDER IN GUYANA is the remarkable tale of Janet Jagan, a young woman from Chicago who married Guyanese activist Cheddi Jagan, and set off for the British colony to start a socialist revolution. For more than fifty years, the couple fought tirelessly to liberate the country from colonial rule and exploitation—despite battering by the international press, imprisonment and the intervention of world figures including Winston Churchill and John F. Kennedy. Free and fair elections were instituted in the early 90's, and Janet Jagan was elected president of Guyana in 1997, the first foreign-born and first woman to serve in the role.
More
|
|
|
DVD Sale |
$295.00 |
|
|
Download
Photo
|
|
War Takes
A film by Adelaida Trujillo and Patricia Castaño
With conflicts raging on nearly every continent, war now regularly transcends the battlefield into everyday life - whether its increased security at airports or infringements on personal privacy. In WAR TAKES, Colombian filmmakers Adelaida Trujillo and Patricia Castaño turn the cameras on themselves to portray the tough realities of civil life in the violent, war-ravaged country of Colombia. Partners in an independent media company, they struggle to balance their family, business and political lives: reporting from dangerous parts of the country; managing their company as the economic situation worsens; parenting young children amid threats of violence and kidnapping; and rethinking their political views as war moves closer to the city. More
|
|

back
to top |
|
|