Mariano Raffo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mariano Raffo
Born Jose Mariano Raffo
(1973-07-26) July 26, 1973
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Residence Liniers
Occupation Film Director, producer & screenwriter.
Partner(s) Marina Bools
Children Carmelo Raffo
Website
http://returntobolivia.blogspot.com/

Mariano Raffo is an Argentine film director. He made short films, music videos and documentaries.

Biography

Home

Mariano Raffo was born in Buenos Aires on August 24, 1973. He lived their formative years in Quilmes, where he studied and worked. He taught Video Classes at the Municipal School of Fine Arts in Quilmes, as it relates to other artists of his generation, as Marcelo Vecelich, Juan Manuel Cellini, with whom he wrote the screenplay for a movie ever made, "El Retorno2" and Carlos Spagarino, Cucamonga fri Cultura member in the city of La Plata, with whom the documentary Carrojero were made. He also meet Agustín Ronconi, Arbolito's leader.

Studies

After the University of Buenos Aires he is entitled Designer in Image and Sound. His collaboration with musician Zelmar Guerin comes from those years, with musical experimentation,[1] video clips,[2] as well as collaboration in design tops Music discs.

Cinema

His first documentary was Carrojero,[3] about a manufacturer of car wheels in Formosa, Argentina. The screenplay of the work was done in collaboration with Carlos Spagarino. Subsequently made several shorts that were broadcast on television on Channel 7 television and Channel Encuentro in Argentina. These may include documentaries where people used to working, they like what they do, and tell storyes about these jobs, as the production of wine in a house in Quilmes, or a dish of Polish cuisine.

His first film was Return to Bolivia,[4] with the script in collaboration with Marina Bools. Recounts the journey to their country of origin of a Bolivian family who lives in Liniers, Buenos Aires, with a greengrocer. Related as a road-movie, the camera follows a pair of Bolivians with their three children, traveling to the edge of the boundary between Jujuy Province and Tarija, and then go to a village in the highlands between Oruro and La Paz. Shot with limited resources and a minimal film crew that included the director and the film's producer and soundman, Mariana Boolls. This production won several international awards, including the award for Best Foreign Film Festival Icaro XI of Guatemala and the Best Documentary Festival Gualeguaychú. In its premiere on July 2, 2009,[5] received positive reviews.[6]

Filmography

Film

Short

  • Carrojero (2004)
  • De Cómo y Donde sacó Don Carlos Aquel Vino
  • Barszcz
  • Caras (2002)

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.