If there's a song we're predicting to be hearing all summer, it's Sebastían Yatra's latest feel-good, single, "Vagabundo," which features fellow Colombian singers Manuel Turizo and Béele. The upbeat and vibey merengue track reflects on the feeling of pretending to have moved on after publicly running into an ex. The video is accompanied by a music video directed by Joaquin Cambre and features cameos from actress Daniela Botero, performer Valeria Sandoval, and TikToker El Mindo.
The music video portrays a group of friends enjoying themselves at a boat party on a warm summer day over Miami waters. The guys are having a blast even flirting with other women, but their fun unexpectedly comes to an end after the exes are confronted with the tension that still exists between them.
"Vagabundo" is Yatra's second release this year. It follows his single "Una Noche Sin Pensar," which dropped in February. The...
The music video portrays a group of friends enjoying themselves at a boat party on a warm summer day over Miami waters. The guys are having a blast even flirting with other women, but their fun unexpectedly comes to an end after the exes are confronted with the tension that still exists between them.
"Vagabundo" is Yatra's second release this year. It follows his single "Una Noche Sin Pensar," which dropped in February. The...
- 5/12/2023
- by Johanna Ferreira
- Popsugar.com
Sebastían Yatra has dropped a new single, “Vagabundo,” which features appearances by fellow Colombian artists Manuel Turizo and Beéle. The upbeat merengue track, which reflects on the feeling of pretending to be okay in public after a breakup, arrives along with a music video directed by Joaquin Cambre.
The music video features cameos from actress Daniela Botero, performer Valeria Sandoval, and TikToker El Mindo, showcasing a group of friends having fun together during a boat party. Things don’t quite end as expected.
“Vagabundo” is Yatra’s second release of the year,...
The music video features cameos from actress Daniela Botero, performer Valeria Sandoval, and TikToker El Mindo, showcasing a group of friends having fun together during a boat party. Things don’t quite end as expected.
“Vagabundo” is Yatra’s second release of the year,...
- 5/12/2023
- by Emily Zemler
- Rollingstone.com
Joaquín Cambre’s feature debut is nicely shot but held back by a glib romance that descends into unearned mawkishness
Argentinian director and co-writer Joaquín Cambre has created an example of that perennially tiresome genre, the quirky-bittersweet coming-of-ager (not a remake of the French silent classic). It indulges its young hero’s maudlin escapist fantasies by making us live inside them for a long stretch at the end, when we discover that this central trope is anti-climactic and doesn’t work dramatically in connection with the real world.
Tomas (Angelo Mutti Spinetta) is a lonely and unhappy teen in Argentina, obsessed with space travel and plagued with delusional fantasies about going to the moon, all triggered by a traumatic episode in his early childhood. He is not taking the medication prescribed by his psychiatrist and with the exception of a sweet kid brother, his family life is oppressive. Then he...
Argentinian director and co-writer Joaquín Cambre has created an example of that perennially tiresome genre, the quirky-bittersweet coming-of-ager (not a remake of the French silent classic). It indulges its young hero’s maudlin escapist fantasies by making us live inside them for a long stretch at the end, when we discover that this central trope is anti-climactic and doesn’t work dramatically in connection with the real world.
Tomas (Angelo Mutti Spinetta) is a lonely and unhappy teen in Argentina, obsessed with space travel and plagued with delusional fantasies about going to the moon, all triggered by a traumatic episode in his early childhood. He is not taking the medication prescribed by his psychiatrist and with the exception of a sweet kid brother, his family life is oppressive. Then he...
- 3/20/2019
- by Peter Bradshaw
- The Guardian - Film News
A Trip To The Moon
Sometimes when you’e struggling to communicate with your family and get them to understand what you’re going though, a journey into space is what it takes to resolve matters. That’s the approach taken by Tomás (Ángelo Mutti Spinetta), the lonely young hero of Joaquín Cambre’s magical realist film A Trip To The Moon. Having won a good bit of praise on the festival circuit, it’s now being released theatrically in the UK. Taking a break from shooting music videos in New York, the Argentinian director told me why telling this story mattered to him so much.
Joaquín Cambre
“I actually really don’t know how I came up with this idea,” he admits. “I think I always wanted to do a coming of age film because at that particular age was when I decided to be a film director so...
Sometimes when you’e struggling to communicate with your family and get them to understand what you’re going though, a journey into space is what it takes to resolve matters. That’s the approach taken by Tomás (Ángelo Mutti Spinetta), the lonely young hero of Joaquín Cambre’s magical realist film A Trip To The Moon. Having won a good bit of praise on the festival circuit, it’s now being released theatrically in the UK. Taking a break from shooting music videos in New York, the Argentinian director told me why telling this story mattered to him so much.
Joaquín Cambre
“I actually really don’t know how I came up with this idea,” he admits. “I think I always wanted to do a coming of age film because at that particular age was when I decided to be a film director so...
- 3/19/2019
- by Jennie Kermode
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Durban — The Durban Int’l. Film Festival opened Thursday night with a celebration of South African womanhood and a commitment to diversity in film, even as it mourned the passing of a festival icon and commemorated the 100th anniversary of the birth of Nelson Mandela.
The 39th edition opened with Jerome Pikwane’s “The Tokoloshe,” a psychological thriller about a destitute hospital cleaner who’s forced to confront the demons of her past to try to save a child’s life.
In prepared remarks, delivered by a colleague at Thursday’s opening ceremony because she wasn’t able to attend, Diff manager Chipo Zhou described the movie as a parable of womanhood in a country plagued by sexual violence.
“It is a horror film…unveiling the menace that is our everyday burden as women in this country,” she said, adding more hopefully that the movie “sets the scene for a...
The 39th edition opened with Jerome Pikwane’s “The Tokoloshe,” a psychological thriller about a destitute hospital cleaner who’s forced to confront the demons of her past to try to save a child’s life.
In prepared remarks, delivered by a colleague at Thursday’s opening ceremony because she wasn’t able to attend, Diff manager Chipo Zhou described the movie as a parable of womanhood in a country plagued by sexual violence.
“It is a horror film…unveiling the menace that is our everyday burden as women in this country,” she said, adding more hopefully that the movie “sets the scene for a...
- 7/19/2018
- by Christopher Vourlias
- Variety Film + TV
Santiago International Film Festival (August 20–27, 2017), announced its awards at last night’s closing ceremony.“La familia” by Gustavo Rondón Córdova (Venezuela),
Among the awarded films were: La familia by Gustavo Rondón Córdova (Venezuela), as the Best Film in the International Competition; Sapo by Juan Pablo Ternicier (Chile) in the Chilean Cinema Competition and Hombre eléctrico by Álvaro Muñoz (Chile) in the Local Talent Short Film Competition, which were chosen as the best productions in their categories by a jury composed of representatives of the Chilean and international film industry.
The Audience Award was presented to a Belgian filmmaker Andrés Lübbert for his documentary The Color of the Chameleon/ El Color Del Camaleon a psychological portrait of his father’s unfinished past during the Pinochet regime, that participated in the Chilean Cinema Competition.
2017 Sanfic Industry
Sanfic Industry section, which took place between August 21 and 25, generated an important space for development and...
Among the awarded films were: La familia by Gustavo Rondón Córdova (Venezuela), as the Best Film in the International Competition; Sapo by Juan Pablo Ternicier (Chile) in the Chilean Cinema Competition and Hombre eléctrico by Álvaro Muñoz (Chile) in the Local Talent Short Film Competition, which were chosen as the best productions in their categories by a jury composed of representatives of the Chilean and international film industry.
The Audience Award was presented to a Belgian filmmaker Andrés Lübbert for his documentary The Color of the Chameleon/ El Color Del Camaleon a psychological portrait of his father’s unfinished past during the Pinochet regime, that participated in the Chilean Cinema Competition.
2017 Sanfic Industry
Sanfic Industry section, which took place between August 21 and 25, generated an important space for development and...
- 8/27/2017
- by Sydney Levine
- Sydney's Buzz
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