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http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/ Tracing the winding road of The Hour of the Furnaces in the First World by Mariano Mestman In the last fifty years an extensive bibliography has discussed The Hour of the Furnaces (1968) and the inseparable proposal of Third Cinema (1969). In this chapter I will focus on a less explored aspect: the film’s journey in non-commercial, alternative or militant circuits linked to the student and workers movement in the first world throughout 1968 and the immediate following years. The Hour of the Furnaces and the manifesto Towards a Third Cinema can be inscribed, as it is well known, within a wider period, the so-called long 60s. After the pioneer essay by Fredric Jameson (1984) on this period – that according to him could be tracked back to sometime in the second half of the 1950s and could be extended until 1972-1974 – many other authors used the same concept and proposed different periodizations. As far as I am aware, the ‘widest’ locates the origins of the long 60s at the beginning of the Algeria War (1954) or the Bandung Conference (1955) and its ending in the Sandinist Revolution (1979). Of course, it is a periodization that takes into account also the idea of the global 1960s inasmuch as the 1960s account for the expansion of a common sensibility at an international level that tries to cover a wide range of processes of rebellion, revolt, insurrection and revolution in a number of countries around the world. That temporal extension (long 60s.) and geographical (global 60s.) is quite apt to think about The Hour of the Furnaces in its national and international context. Although its world premiere took place amidst the revolts of 1968, at the same time, it is possible to find the conditions that made the film possible as far back as the middle of the 1950s. And this not only because its third worldism dialogues with Algeria and Bandung, but also because 1955 is the year of the civic-military coup against the government of General Juan Domingo Perón in Argentina and the beginning of the so-called “Peronist resistance” against successive governments. The whole of the second part of the film, sometimes disregarded by academic accounts, concerns itself precisely with Peronism and “the Resistance”. At the same time, we can extend its ‘sixties’ influence until the end of the 1970s. In this respect, we can take also as a significant fact the almost forgotten dossier organised in 1979 by Guy Hennebelle and the group CinémAction for the magazine Tiers Monde (1979) about the influence of the film and the manifesto in several countries around the world. As it is well known, in the 1980s, and even in later periods, the film and the document were revisited in new manifestos, events and proposals in different places. Although, from my perspective, the historical period of The Hour of the Furnaces (and of Third Cinema) had already concluded even in those years, its ideas (cinematic, political) could still dialogue without a doubt with oppositional and confrontational to power initiatives in many countries. In an important essay on the “changing geography” of Third Cinema, Michael Chanan (1997) reconstructed, among other questions, the history of the film and of Solanas and Getino’s manifesto; some misinterpretations and modifications of the original definitions of the three types of cinema; the connections of the film with parallel movements in different countries; and the “transnational function” of Third Cinema. The author also addressed the subsequent recuperation of the thesis put forward by the film and the manifesto and their dialogue with other perspectives more or less similar in the 1980s. In particular, he wrote of the pioneer recuperation by the scholar Teshome Gabriel in his works at the beginning of the decade. He also focused on the well-known Third Cinema Conference held in Edinburgh in 1986, organised by Jim Pines and Paul Willemen that focused on the relevance of the concept of Third Cinema for the oppositional practices in film and video in the 1980s in the metropolitan centres of First World countries.1 In what follows, I will return over some of the testimonies and ideas included in those two moments of the debate around Third Cinema. (the CinémAction dossier of 1979 and the meeting in Edinburgh of 19862) and I will survey other less well known sources and documents such as catalogues from parallel distributors, letters, testimonies or press notes from those days. From there, I aim to look at the place that The Hour of the Furnaces occupied in the circuit of political and militant cinema in the first world, the debates it sparked, the polemics in which it took part3. Of course, it will probably be an incomplete journey but I do not think it is a question of summarising that history but of continuing to explore it. Festivals: between Pesaro, 1968 and Cannes, 1969 “I personally lived the strongest expression of the contestazione (protest) in festivals: the one in Pesaro 68 […] undoubtedly, like probably all episodes of contestazione, was fairly spontaneous and confusing […] In any case, I must say that […] all of us were a little stupid in doing a contestazione so violent and direct against such a progressive and innovative festival […] Pesaro, I repeat, was the only or one of the very few festivals that offered so much space to the most innovative cinematographies and in particular, that had shown […] and openness, an interest and a predisposition for the presentation of Latin American cinema that until then it had not enjoyed in any other festival”.4 A particular scene is repeated in the accounts of the international premiere of The Hour of the Furnaces in the IV Mostra of New Cinema in Pesaro, Italy, in June 1968: after the screening of the first part of the film, summoned by its expressive force, interpellated from the screen by the facial death mask of Ché Guevara in extreme close up accompanied by a deafening percussion rhythm, those attending stood up to shout and carried the filmmakers on their shoulders5. The memories associate this scene to the concurrent agitation of 1968 in Europe and, in Italy, to the coincidence in the street with a student-popular demonstration that ended with several people arrested after clashes with neofascist groups and members of the Italian police. That is, the film turned into a political act as its directors hoped in each screening and as they will argue for a short time later in the notion of the film-act and militant cinema as the ‘most advanced’ category of Third Cinema. “On my pointy shoulder blades and on the shoulders of dozens, hundreds of spectators –said Fernando Birri – we carried Solanas and Getino along the aisle in the jam-packed room for the opening of The Hour of the Furnaces that had just been screened that night for the first time in Europe. Endless ovations, enthusiastic cheers, revolutionary chants. A short time before, under the screen still empty, we had pinned with anything we found at hand, I with the heel of my shoe, a large sheet where in red letters the words of Franz Fanon had been written: “all spectator is a coward or a traitor”. That was the beginning of the epic story of a political and militant cinema that in the following decades changed the virtual potency of those images that want to change the world”. Birri sent us these words to be included in an homage to the film during the Pesaro Festival in 2008, in the fortieth anniversary of its premiere. Who better than the legendary Birri to evoke those events? A few days before the 1968 edition he had seen in a private screening a fragment of his documentary Tire Die/Throw Us a Dime (19581960) included as a ‘filmic quotation’ in the film of the newly formed Grupo Cine Liberación/Liberation Cinema Group. Birri was ‘shocked’ and ‘moved’ by the inclusion of the sequence from Tire Die. This feeling will also be expressed in his words with respect to the showing of the film at the Festival since it was in consonance with the atmosphere of exception that could be felt, the changes in the concept of the Festival and the opening of Europe towards Latin America: “[…] this is what I think is really formidable about the function of The Hour […] for the first time, a Latin American film arrives stating rules of ideological and aesthetic behaviour for a possible European action in the future. This must be understood also in light of the singular moment Europe is living and in light of the singular moment Pesaro is living […]”.6 Although in Europe there was already acknowledgement of the so-called New Latin American Cinema (particularly of Brazilian Cinema Novo and of Cuban cinema), 1968 hastened and radicalised this connection. While in Argentina and Latin America is possible to track back a previous committed cinema, the bibliography and the testimonies have dated back, correctly, the origin of the radicalization of militant cinema in the 60s/70s to that scene in Pesaro. The beginning of an “epic journey” (a term as grandiloquent as precise to describe the zeitgeist at the time) that in those years will involve many other films and filmmakers. But the scene in Pesaro 68 described by Birri had its counterpart the following year at Cannes, the famous Festival that had to close down because of protests in 1968, a few days before Pesaro. A year later, in May 1969, during the VIII International Critics week at Cannes, the three parts of The Hour are screened amidst a huge polemic. The Argentine government hands an official protest through its ambassador in Paris, Aguirre Lagarreta, where it questioned the screening of a film that it considered controversial because it distorted the image of Argentina and constituted a call for violence. It requested also the screening of another film, Invasión/Invasion, with a script by its director Hugo Santiago and Jorge Luis Borges based on a story by Borges and Adolfo Bioy Casares. At the same time, the correspondent of the conservative Argentine newspaper La Prensa, Gloria Alcorta, and other critics protested too to the administration of the Festival. Alcorta lamented the absence of the directors of The Hour because she would have liked to talk to them about “a film that misleads and confuses public opinion and in particular French people badly informed about our problems (…)”. These are quite peculiar arguments considering the film’s harmony with the street protest and the police’ repression in those day of May 1969 in cities of Argentina’s interior as a prelude to the outburst on the 29 and 30 May in Cordoba, known as Cordobazo.7 To the extent in which The Hour was persecuted and censored in Argentina8, Solanas and Getino thought that the international recognition of the film would generate some sort of impact in the local media and the possibility of generating fruitful expectations for its subsequent clandestine distribution in its country of origin. In this sense, the impact of the “diplomatic conflict” that took place at Cannes 69 in the Argentine press was close to realise that objective. The International Critics’ week at Cannes was created in 1962 as a new section of the Cannes Festival as a result of the perception that the official selection was far too narrow to allow for a new cinema in full development. This initiative was part of a new circuit of festivals and filmic encounters that during the decade opened themselves to cinematographies from the periphery. For example, for the New Latin American Cinema these and other events in Western and Eastern Europe represented privileged spaces to showcase the films, even before the circuit Viña del Mar (Chile, 1967-1969) - Mérida (Venezuela, 1968) became its launching pad. In that international alternative circuit, the Pesaro Festival occupies a key place. Its origin goes back to 1965 when it joins those first efforts to build autonomous events independent from the demands of the film market. Already in the presentation of the first edition, its director Lino Micciché acknowledged as antecedents the International Critics’ Week at Cannes and other previous filmic encounters in Italy (such as the Review of Latin American Cinema at Santa Margarita and the Encounter of Porretta Terme9) and he stated explicitly its intention of not creating a “festival of stars” but an Encounter-Forum as a permanent reference point for the new cinemas of the world. He also talked of the interest of Pesaro to “awaken an interest, until then unheard of, on the problems of language and the structural analysis of film, that is, a new film criticism that was not just a new imposture” (Micciché, 1976). The first three years of the Mostra, as it is well known, focused on this last idea with the presence of renowned critics, theorists and intellectuals like Roland Barthes, Christian Metz, Umberto Eco, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Gianni Toti, Galvano della Volpe, among others. With these antecedents, the premiere of The Hour of the Furnaces in the 1968 edition took place within the framework of a clear radicalization of the Mostra. In fact, the space of International Festivals had been strongly questioned a few days before in one of its core centres, the Cannes Festival, occupied by critics, filmmakers and students and in the middle of a general strike. The festival shut down on the 19 May without any prices in parallel with the establishment of the States-General of French Cinema in Paris. Soon after, a sort of contestazione (protest) will also take place at the Venice Festival. In between Cannes and Venice, at the beginning of June, Pesaro found itself in a particular situation. Alternative showcase, perhaps the most advanced in its search around the international “new waves”, the tensions of 68 could do nothing but affect its own structure. Thus, the organization of the Festival – with internal disagreements – establishes an ‘autocontestazione’ (self-protest): it proclaims that festivals are experiencing an historic crisis, opens the event to its functioning as permanent assembly and assumes the revision of its organizational structure, extends its operative criteria to self-management in contact with cultural, artistic and political groups, expands projections to an emerging circuit in urban areas and working class suburbs that in the following year will be call “alternative circuit”.10 This peculiar form of ‘self-protest’ taken on board by the organisers of the Pesaro Festival and expressed in the general assembly is the result of a coalition of forces expressed there. Firstly, the pressure from groups belonging to the Movimento Studantesco (Student Movement) that, together with Goffredo Fofi and other radical journalists from the magazines Ombre Rosse and Quaderni Piacentini, saw in the Mostra a bureaucratic obstacle to their revolutionary and anti-institutional project11. They present a document to the plenary session of the Mostra that radically questions any cultural alternatives within the system. Secondly, a group of important filmmakers from the left (with a strong influence of the Italian Communist Party but also of the thirdworldist left) suggests transforming the Pesaro Festival into “a showcase for a free and oppositional cinema”, committed to confront all other cinematic manifestations, like the Mostra in Venice, as will happen a few weeks later under the drive of ANAC (National Association of Italian Filmmakers)12. Thirdly, Latin American filmmakers (from Cuba, Brazil and Argentina) that shared the spirit of the student protests but that, somehow, put pressure together with the authorities to have the event taking place inasmuch as Pesaro constituted a fundamental enclave to exhibit their productions abroad and even, in some cases, the possibility of reaching the European market 13. The long review of that year’s Festival by the Cuban Julio García Espinosa for the magazine Cine Cubano, in the same way as the “Latin American Cinema’s declaration in Pesaro”, is telling about the balance the Latin Americans were trying to achieve between the protest of the European revolutionary student movement – that in broad terms they shared – and the necessity for the Mostra to take place14. Solanas’ words quoted in the epigraph account to this. Although the reconstruction of the events in Pesaro is not the object of this essay , it is important to stress their influence and dynamism because without a doubt they are relevant in the later impact gained by the Argentine film. Some of the founders of the Mostra – such as Lino Micciché and Bruno Torri – considered that impact came out stronger because of the crisis of the Festival in 6816. But overall, it was a very complex and controversial situation17. Primarily because the groups mentioned above – and others like the delegations from Eastern Europe – found themselves in a global key situation for the political and cultural left. In the run up to the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, the disputes between the communist left and the numerous emerging new lefts were in vogue. Among many other testimonies on those days, Goffredo Fofi insisted more than once in the scope of the radical position assumed by the Student Movement against critics and filmmakers of the socialist or communist (among others those directing the Mostra) in the last instance ‘social democratic’, ‘opportunistic’ and ‘corporative’ in their interests in film18. 15 In contrast to this position, Valentino Orsini – somehow the intermediary between the organisers of the Mostra and the rebellious movement – president of the assembly of filmmakers – recalled his participation alongside other left-wing filmmakers in tackling the ‘chaos’ and the attempt to sabotage that edition of Pesaro. “A communist without the identification in disagreement with the political line of the party” – according to his own memories – Orsini was on those days, together with Alberto Filippi, finishing a third wordlist film inspired by Fanon and had quite a role in the origin and in the making process of The Hour of the Furnaces. In reference to those days, Orsini recalled: “for the Latin American friends, the Festival was extremely important from a political point of view (…) the problem was Venice, Cannes but it was not Pesaro”19. Pesaro 68 resulted then a “baptism of fire” for The Hour of the Furnaces and the beginning of its entry in the world. In such an scenario, as radical as negotiated, it is possible to observe almost all the issues that will frame the debates and tensions that will accompany the international diffusion of the film: the fascination for the impact caused by the insertion of the image of a dead Ché Guevara; the invitation to a dialogue with the spectator to transform him into an ‘actor’ or the political process; the criticisms of the film’s totalising discourse, at times Manichean, ‘short on dialectics’; the acknowledgment and questioning of its emotive interpellation or of its use of the languages of advertising, or avant-garde or agit-prop as expressed in the daring montage of its first part; the almost unanimous rejection of Perón by the traditional left (and beyond) and at the same time the recognition by the new lefts of the working class and the revolutionary potential of the Argentine Peronist movement recovered by the second part of the film; the debates surrounding the call for revolutionary violence20. Questions that are interwoven tangled together in the numerous commentaries about the film even since his first international projection at Pesaro 68. Militant distribution of the film in the First World “Dear comrade: two months have gone by since we send you the film The Hour of the Furnaces for a number of projections in your region […] In all this time, in spite of repeated demands, you have not send us the results of the political work carried out, as you promised us to do […] As such, you do not offer us any guarantee of a rigorous political work in the discussion of the films with the proletariat”.21 In the year that goes between the IV Mostra of Pesaro (June, 1968) and the VIII International Critics’ week at Cannes (May 1969), while in Argentina Cine Liberación starts the clandestine projection of The Hour of the Furnaces during the military dictatorship of general Onganía, the film visits numerous international events such as festivals, mostras, cine-clubs, cinemateques and film libraries (and it is bought by some European public televisions). It is well known the notable impact the final images of the first part of the film had on these and other places: the television sequence of the dead body of Ché lying on a stretcher over a large cement sink-trough in the laundry room of Vallegrande hospital (to which his remains were taken after his execution in La Higuera), crisscrossed by a revolutionary-third wordlist discourse proposed by the voice-over narration, followed by the photograph of Ché’s face in extreme close up, with a deafening soundtrack rallying to action22. Probably less known is the also important interest raised by the sequences of the struggles carried out by the workers and other people of the Peronist resistance seen in the second half of the second part of the film. Although festivals and even the alternative circuit exhibited primarily the first part of the film, those other images of the mobilizations and factory occupations in Argentina entered also in a dialogue with a global spirit of revolt and achieved and fulfilled a function, in no way less important, in the militant circuits of exhibition (students, neighbourhoods, trade unions). The European ‘parallel’ or ‘alternative’ circuit configured since 68 was in itself heterogeneous. Perhaps as expression of that phenomenon we call 68: in between counter-culture and workers and popular insurgency; in between the new subjectivities of the sixties, armed action and third worldism; in between rebelliousness and revolution. In an essay on third cinema written for the Third Cinema conference at Edinburgh 1986, Paul Willemen recuperated the three categories proposed by Solanas and Getino (first, second and third cinema) and observed that in Europe, the vast majority of films from the Third World were consumed or read in a “second cinema way”. That is, displacing their political dimension and favouring, however, their dimension artistic-auteurist (Willemen 1989: 9). Of course, it is an affirmation valid in many cases which includes the recurring phenomenon of ‘discoveries’ from peripheral cinematographies to the centres of cinema in the world, the ‘recuperation’ of filmmakers or films that in those years (and from well before) came from the emergent Third World and were read as ‘auteur films’. However, in the case of The Hour of the Furnaces, its distribution in the First World is a paradigmatic example of the fact that the type of reading/consumption highlighted by Willemen coexisted with a militant use, as it was even reflected in a known French political fiction film, Camarades/Comrades (1970), by Marin Karmitz. In this film, a scene included (recorded live) shows the screening by a union committee of the famous fragment of the ‘factory occupations’ (ten minutes) from the second part of the Argentine film. The workers and militants watching the projection debate over their own experiences of strikes and occupations in France. It is an important scene in the development of Karmitz’s film since, as Christian Zimmer perceived, it is situated in a key moment in relation to the problem of awareness-raising of the protagonist in relation to class solidarity23. In the same years, other well-known political filmmakers (like the French Chris Marker or the Indian Mrinal Sen) incorporated minor fragments of The Hour of the Furnaces and other films by Cine Liberación. But the interesting aspect of Karmitz’s case is that he put on the screen precisely the experience of a militant use of The Hour that was taken place in similar circumstances in France. The manifesto Towards a Third Cinema was published for the first time in France and The Hour of the Furnaces had an early recognition between militant cinema groups in 68. According to Sébastien Layerle (2007: 156), the film was cited as example of a possible ‘project of synthesis’ by several representatives of the different tendencies within the General States of French Cinema formed in May25. In the same way, the majority of film magazines devoted important pages to The Hour of the Furnaces26. Some articles, like those from Positif and Cahiers du Cinema (end 1968, early 1969) gathered attention for its projection at the French cinemateque as well as in an alternative and militant cultural circuit. If in March 1969 the critic Guy Hennebelle denounced that, although screened at the French cinemateque and at the Locarno Festival (Switzerland), the Argentine film was prohibited in France and, consequently, it had been impossible to screen it during the fortnight organised by the magazine Positif27, a little later on in May, it will be screened within the International Critics week at Cannes (sparking the ‘diplomatic’ scandal mentioned above) and will be distributed in Paris and other French cities. 24 A particular characteristic of the post 68 period was the inclusion of political films by third world filmmakers in the catalogues of the principal non-commercial and/or militant distributors in the world such as The Other Cinema (London), Third World Cinema Group, Tricontinental Film Centre and Newsreel (United States), MK2 owned by Karmitz (France), Cinéma d'Information Politique-Champ Libre (Canada-Montreal), El Volti (Spain), Collettivo Cinema Militante, San Diego Cinematográfica and Centro Documentazione Cinema e Lotta di Classe (Italy), among many others. The Hour of the Furnaces occupied a significant space in the activity of many of these collectives. The Third World Cinema Group, for example, was created by students and young Latin American in the city of San Francisco who had been in contact with films from the region in a solidarity trip to Cuba in 1970 and then with the films that arrived in 1971 to the San Francisco Festival, like The Hour of the Furnaces or Sangre del Cóndor/Blood of the Condor (Jorge Sanjinés and Ukamau group, Bolivia, 1969). In this last event, they had contacted the Uruguayan distributor Walter Achugar who they considered as a promoter of the organization. Almost from the start, the group had installed a distribution office in the West Coast (Berkeley) and another in the East Coast (New York) with the objective of showing films in cine-clubs they could reach followed by the forming of a distribution company and the screening of the films to community organizations, theatres, schools, trade unions or churches28. A short time after starting their activities, its organisers will remember that the origins of the group had been shaped “around The Hour of the Furnaces”29. Some years later, in the answer to a poll included in the dossier by CinémAction mentioned above, Gary Crowds – then editor of the magazine Cinéaste and member of the Tricontinental Film Centre in New York, a group that followed from the experience of the Third World Cinema Group–, will also recall the importance of The Hour of the Furnaces (also of Sangre del Cóndor) in the construction of a distribution network for films from the Third World in the United States. In the case of the Argentine film, Crowds said that – despite its main audience coming from art house cinemas and universities (intellectuals, left wing militants, students) and not managing to influence in the creation of new “models for distribution” – without any doubt the film had impacted progressive filmmakers and it had received a “incredibly favourable” reception in the United States, even by ‘bourgeois critics” for its cinematographic power and political sharpness, contributing in this way to the increased respectability of the so-called cinema from the Third World in the critical sphere 30. Responding to the same poll, the Canadian André Pâquet pointed out the important influence of the Argentine film in left wing circles in Quebec. Pâquet recalled the similarities and convergence between the film and the manifesto Towards a Third Cinema and progressive Québécois filmmakers but he complained about those who tried to impose the Argentine film as an ‘ideal’ type of militant cinema without recognising the differences between the national situations (Argentina and Quebec). Furthermore, he dismissed the appropriation of the film by militant groups from Quebec with the objective of confirming their own radical positions in their disputes with other progressive filmmakers in Quebec equally important – in his view – who were also sympathetic to the general spirit of The Hour of the Furnaces31. Although Pâquet did not mention which militant groups he was criticising, there is no doubt he is thinking of the Comité d´Information Politique/Committee of Political Information (CIP) that had incorporated The Hour to their catalogue in 1971. CIP produced ‘accompanying’ materials about its general activity of film distribution precisely with a summary of the Argentine film, the completed titles and subtitles, comments by Solanas and the group Cine Liberación. In Champ Libre, the magazine edited by the Committee, it was mentioned that the dossier was intended as a starting point for a “political debate” about the film in Quebec, and two chapters of the dossier were highlighted as “hypothesis for further work”. They were proposals for discussion. The magazine affirmed: “the analyses done to verify those hypotheses come from groups ‘in situation’ during the discussions”, that is, they come from the practical experience of exhibition in the region32. Beyond critical comments on the film, it is interesting that the group put the film in such a central position in relation to their activity. In the article cited, CIP commented that the Argentine film could be used not only in relation to Latin America (and in particular, Argentina), but also in relation to their own circumstances: Quebec in the middle of initiatives for its political, cultural and linguistic ‘decolonization’ from Canada33. The testimony of scholar Zuzana Pick about her own experience as spectator of the film somehow confirms the last point: “I had the opportunity to attend a full screening of the film in Montreal during the spring of 1971 and in London in the winter of 1977. Although no provisions were made for discussion, the breaks between each section gave rise to all kinds of debates. In Montreal the denunciation of neocolonialism in the first part of The Hour elicited debates on the status of Quebec in view of the events of October of 1970 and the suspension of civil rights by the federal government of Canada” (Pick, 1993: 207). In Italy, in the weeks before Pesaro 68, the editing of the Argentine film had been finished in Ager Film, a small production company owned by Giuliani De Negri – renowned figure of the Communist resistance, Valentino Orsini and the Taviani Brothers. While in one moviola the film was taking shape in another Orsini, who had developed with Solanas and Getino in Buenos Aires a previous project three years before, was finishing the editing of the fiction film I danatti della Terra/The Wretched of the Earth, made with Alberto Filippi. It is not coincidental, in this sense, that together with the Third Worldism inspired by Fanon, both films shared precise proposals or formal expressions: the use of intertitles, titles about violence or flashes over a black screen and even the unique appeal to political action on the part of the spectators34. As in France, since the revolt of 68 it is possible to find among Italian filmmakers and films references to Solanas, Getino and their film. The document, mentioned above, handed in Pesaro by the Student Movement together with the magazine Ombre Rosse (titled “Culture at the Service of the Revolution”) includes a radical critique of the “cinematic institution” with arguments close to those of Cine Liberación. Furthermore, the idea – obviously of its time – of articulating “cultural struggle” and “political struggle” includes an explicit reference to Solanas. Many other links between Italian political cinema and the Argentine film could be mentioned35. In relation to its exhibition, Goffredo Fofi – director of Ombre Rosse and co-author of the document – will go with Solanas to Trento to introduce the film at the university, at that moment occupied by students. In the months that followed, The Hour of the Furnaces will continue its journey through the militant circuit in universities in the North of Italy. In February 1969, for example, the powerful Colletivo Cinema Militante screened in Turin, with the presence of the filmmaker, the completed film (the three parts) within the framework of a political work with the groups of the Student Movement that included cities like Perugia, Turin, Trento and Milan. In the years that followed, The Hour continued to be used in militant projections in several Italian cities. One of the groups that quite often included the film in its activities was the Centro Documentazione Cinema e Lotta di Classe coordinated by Vico Codella. This group had appeared from internal dissent in the Rome branch of the Collettivo Cinema Militante and for a while worked linked to the production company San Diego Cinematográfica of Renzo Rossellini, key figure in the promotion of Latin American and Third World cinema. Proof of the systematic approach to political work with the films by the Centro Documentazione is the letter cited in the epigraph. In this respect, Vico Codella remembers that in the projections in working class neighbourhoods of the periphery of Rome it was possible to notice an effective interest and a “very intense participation” by the workers convened. According to Codella, among the foreign films the group screened, The Hour of the Furnaces was one of the films projected more often in those years “because it was useful to organise debate”36. In Spain, The Hour was also used with a militant intent towards the end of Franco’s dictatorship and then during the period called ‘transition’, as remembered by the political filmmaker Andrés Linares, the journalist Ignacio Ramonet and the historian Román Gubern37. Most probably, the film was shown in Madrid by collectives like the ones formed by Linares or Tino Calabuij. However, it was incorporated in a more systematic way in Catalonia, where it formed part of the catalogue of the collective El Volti, whose materials will later on end up forming part of the better known Central del Curt. The activity of El Volti reached its peak between 1969 and 1975, that is, still during Francoism and in a context in which, at the same time, the Comissió de Cinema de Barcelona (Barcelona’s Committee for Cinema) was formed. El Volti was formed by a group of professionals, linked to the Communist Party of Catalonia (PSUC), although not in any organic or systematic way, and organised a repository of militant films and a clandestine distribution company. El Volti, who had relations with similar groups in Barcelona or Madrid, worked together with other collectives (particularly those of the Communist trade union Comisiones Obreras) to carry out dissemination work in religious schools, semi-legal cine-clubs, private homes or in spaces facilitated by neighbourhood committees in Barcelona and other parts of Catalonia. These organizations had the responsibility of convening the public, sometimes in small gatherings but sometimes in large numbers38. In this context, Román Gubern – associated to El Volti – remembers that the copy of the Argentine film (the first part) was in high demand. This reconstruction (partial and incomplete, of course) of the use of The Hour of the Furnaces by militant cinema collectives in Europe and North America demonstrates an aspect very often put aside in the textual and historiographic analyses of this type of films: their inscription in the international film festival circuit, and their political use in the militant circuit to generate discussions and political actions. These experiences, around the social intervention of the films, are the ones that, in the last instance, define the so-called militant cinema and are fundamental when evaluating the value and meanings associated with the films in each place and historical moment. Although some of these filmmakers and militant groups that disseminated the Argentine film also moved away from its hypotheses and even from its formal aspects 39, it is well known that the thirdworldism promoted by The Hour of the Furnaces as well as its audacious editing and its avant-garde language (the first part) were celebrated almost unanimously due to their agreement with the explorations associated with 68 around the world. There was even talk in reference to Eisenstein of a new Battleship Potemkin. However, the film gave way to a number of debates. Perhaps the most important were those associated with its support of general Perón and to the Peronist movement. The “Damned fact” - - Augusto Martínez Torres: “This defence of Peronism, is it really because you think is ok or, maybe, is it an instrumentalization (…) is it a sort of infiltration of leftist groups within Peronism?” Octavio Getino: “No, no, there is no trap here”.40 As we have seen, although the first part of The Hour of the Furnaces (we could say the least Peronist) was the one more often exhibited worldwide, the history of Peronism and of the workers’ struggle of the ‘Resistencia’, included in the second part41 occupied an important place in the militant circuit (less diffusion had the third part, a radical call to the revolutionary violence in the Third World which was rarely screened). The decisions about what parts of the film to screen – either in the parallel circuit or in festivals – sometimes had to do with technical reasons, or just pure chance, but many other times they had to do with specific reasons. It is true that the long duration of the whole film (more than four hours) inevitably meant the screening of separated parts. But, at the same time, it is evident that the decision of privileging the first part was linked not only to its formal appeal and its revolutionary potency, but also to the suspicions about, or direct rejection of, Peronism (second part of the film) by an important section of the European and North American left that, with far too much ingenuity and lightness, related it to the fascisms of the old continent. In the previous section I mentioned the insertion of The Hour of the Furnaces in the French militant circuit. In the already mentioned dossier by CinemAction in the magazine Tiers Monde, Guy Hennebelle (1979: 642) remembered that with Solanas’ agreement, the sequences perceived as ‘too’ Peronists had been cut from the first version of the film circulated in Paris although, later on, the film was exhibited in its complete version. This difference between the first version and subsequent ones in the memory of Hennebelle seems to be plausible because other critics42 refer in passing to a shorter French version and even Solanas does too: towards the end of 1969, he sent a letter to the director of the Cuban film institute (ICAIC), Alfredo Guevara, about possible changes to the original version of the film for its exhibition in Cuba. In that letter, Solanas wrote about the placement in the film of the reels about the “Chronicle of Peronism (19451955)” – where it was explained the successes achieved in the economic, social political spheres – and affirmed: “without the analysis of Peronism in power, it is not possible to understand what the movement has been, nor its actions or its transformation from the moment of its fall until today. For example, in France, due to necessities of shortening the time of the exhibition, we cut that part and the experience was negative because it created more confusion”. The American critic Gary Crowds and the German Peter Shumann also referred to these issues. Crowds remembered that in general, in the political scene of the United States, only the first part was screened precisely because “the sequences about Peronism were widely thought of as unacceptable for the North American public”43. Schumann considered the absence of a profound debate of the film’s arguments in Germany in part due to the problem with Peronism. That is, to the misgivings expressed by the left in relation to a phenomenon that it suspected to have “fascist roots”. Consequently, according to Schumann, the German left never fully assumed the Argentine film while sharing some aspects of the political line of the film around revolution and violence44. The rejection of Perón and its Movement was particularly frequent among the critics of the European communist left. The Italian case has its peculiarities because together with the groups of the new left, many individuals and institutions linked to the PCI – some already mentioned above – supported the film, even at some point incorporating it to the catalogue of ARCI. Even so, from its startling premiere at Pesaro, both the Peronist question and diverse aspects of the language of The Hour of the Furnaces (the tension between the emotive and the rational, for example) were themes of different Italian reviews and, in some cases, criticised45. In any case, the acknowledgement of the film is present in almost all the film magazines and it is highlighted – not without polemic – in the pages of Guido Aristarco’s Cinema Nuovo (“il film piú importante della rassegna di Pesaro/The most important film of the Mostra at Pesaro”; “grossa lezione di honesta política e di correttezza socialista/great lesson of political honesty and of socialist correctness”). It was also highlighted in comments in Ombre Rosse or in Cinema 60 –where together with an extended interview by Lino Micciché with Solanas, there was an early and profound analysis of the film by Alberto Filippi which reached Latin America when it was translated in the first number of the Uruguayan magazine Cine del Tercer Mundo in 196946. On the other hand, some of the harshest criticisms of the Argentine film came from the French and Spanish critics close to the communist sphere47. The critic Fernando Lara, who attended the 1968 Pesaro Festival for the Spanish magazine Nuestro Cine, acknowledged the importance the Argentine film had (“made a little into the symbol of the festival”) but he considered that the projection of the whole film was “a big disappointment” because “it is just a Peronist pamphlet (…) whose success is the most horrible contradiction the Pesaro Festival could fall into”. In his anger, Lara went further in the next article of the magazine, where in direct reference to that Peronist option in the film, he wrote “ethical and political immorality”, “ideological careerism”, “lack of information and of an honest approach to Latin American reality”, “craziness” and “fascist-like act”. Furthermore, for the Spanish critic, Solanas used dishonestly “‘Ché’ Guevara, Frantz Fanon, Fidel Castro, Sartre, Lenin or general San Martín to produce a big pamphlet in favour of Peronism and to present Perón as a precursor of the Cuban revolution of 1959”. And he sustained that “in Pesaro we hoped to find anything except a debate around Peronism, Argentine movement unanimously considered as a degeneration of European fascism not only seen like this – as the directors of the film intended – by the left wing intellectuals victims of cultural neo-colonialism”48. Contrary to these positions of radical rejection of the political option of the film, other critics and filmmakers associated with the ‘ruptures’ of 68 shared the thesis about revolutionary violence and even accepted the left wing reading of Peronism the film defenced as one more of the ‘national paths’ towards socialism. Some also highlighted the new analysis of Peronism the film proposed49. In fact, in several articles in newspapers and magazines, Solanas and Getino insisted on how the film argues for a critical reading of the historical experience of Peronism (1946-1955) showing its multi-classist character and only recuperating its ‘more advanced’ aspects. In an early interview by Louis Marcorelles in Cahiers du Cinema, for example, Solanas recuperated the importance of nationalisms (among them Peronism) in the processes of Latin American liberation and pointed out that many people had not understood the critical analysis and the thesis the film formulated: on the limits of bourgeois nationalism, on the impossibility of a democratic-bourgeois revolution if at the same time it did not project itself onto a socialist revolution; on the Latin American horizon of the national struggles50 (see also Javier Campo’s chapter in this volume). Getino too debated these issues explicitly with Spanish critics51. In fact, after the already mentioned review by Lara in 1968, Nuestro Cine interviewed Getino in 1969 as a sign of ‘openness’ on the part of the magazine with the objective of “clarifying certain aspects (although) our positions and yours remain opposed”, as the critic Martínez Torres commented in the introduction. In the article, they insisted that viewing the film during its premiere at Pesaro, the first part was interesting, although debatable, while the second had deeply outraged the journalists of the magazine. In this sense, they asked Getino what was the reason why, after Pesaro and in other festivals (such Karlovy Vary in Czechoslovakia, Manheim in Germany or Mérida in Venezuela), only the first part had been screened, if “it is evident that the first part functions, isolated, in one way and in another together with the second part”. For Nuestro Cine, the defence of Peronism was “debatable”, but the defence of Peron was “unacceptable”. Getino’s answer was forceful: “We do not understand Peronism without Perón (…) for us, at that stage, Perón could be for Argentina what Castro has been for Cuba”, he asserted. Some years later, the Spanish political magazine Triunfo, subtitled another interview with Getino with the telling subtitle: “The Reception in Europe: Peronism, a fascism?” In it, Joaquin Jordá went back over the debates generated in other magazines around Peronism. Getino rejected – as a mix of ingenuity and dirty tricks – critiques like those of Lara in Nuestro Cine or the one by the French communist party through La Nouvelle Critique but, in spite of everything, he considered logical the discussions arising from the film because to a large extent, they were linked to the “disinformation” about the Latin American reality in Europe as a consequence of the limitations and deformations imposed by “imperialist mass-media” and also due to “a vision from a left that, in general, did not understand, has not investigated or gone deep into the reality of the national movements of liberation in most parts of the Third World”. He carried on: “and even less has understood the process of Peronism in Argentina, confusing the external and anecdotal forms of this process or the anecdotal nature of the discourses of its leader with the essence and the clearly anti-imperialist and revolutionary t direction hat is the one present in the mass movement, in the Argentine working class, fundamentally Peronist” (13-14). This idea of ‘disinformation’ or of ‘incomprehension’ on the part of European intellectuals of the political processes of the Third World (like the Argentine Peronism) became the common threat in those years for the defence of the film not only by its makers but also by other militant filmmakers that promoted the film. In the case of Spain, for example, Andrés Linares – who dedicated several pages of his book on militant cinema to The Hour of the Furnaces – associated the criticisms of the second part of the film outside of Argentina to the fact that “the phenomenon of Peronism is almost always badly understood and worst interpreted”52. If in the late 1969 letter mentioned above to the director of ICAIC Alfredo Guevara, Solanas had insisted in the inclusion of the reels on the history of Peronism for a better comprehension of the film in Cuba, towards the end of the period we have been studying – perhaps as a corollary of some of the criticisms that we have followed – Solanas justified the projection of only the first part at the Benalmádena Festival in October 197753 because it was directed to a wider public “even ignorant of the conditions of Argentina”, while the rest of the film was “a material developed and conceived for a political and militant work on the specifics of the Argentine political practices” which, when it was projected outside of its country of origin, it had not achieved the “results we hoped for” 54. During the period under discussion the highest point, the culmination of the polemic about the “Peronist question” was reached in June 1974 during the Rencontres Internationales Pour Un Nouveau Cinema (International Encounters for a New Cinema) in Montreal organised by André Pâquet and the Comité d´Action Cinematographique. For a week it gathered together over 200 filmmakers, critics, producers and distributors of political cinema from Europe, North America, Latin America, black Africa and the Maghreb. The debates that took place there in search of a political-cinematographic international alternative were varied but the theory of Third Cinema and the presence of Solanas took an important role. Although I have written about this event and the polemics around Peronism somewhere else (Mestman, 2014 and 2015), it is worthy to come back here over the issue because it accounts for the dynamics of the political process navigated by militant cinema in those years, both in the national arena as in the Latin American and around the world. In the Argentine case, I am referring to the insertion of Cine Liberación in the Peronist Movement –under the exclusive leadership of Perón – that took place via The Hour of the Furnaces, the filmed interviews carried out with the leader in his exile in Spain as a communication tool with his followers in Argentina (1971/1972), and the final insertion of the group into the State and its progressive policies for cinema with the return of Perón to government for its third presidency of Argentina (1973/1974). In this sense, Solanas’ conference in Montreal 1974 – on the history of the group Cine Liberación from its opposition to the military dictatorship (1968-1972) to its participation in Peron’s third government (1973/1974) – was harshly attacked in the debate that followed by two key figures of the New Latin American Cinema in exile: the Uruguayan producer/distributor Walter Achugar (founder of the Third World Cinemateque in Montevideo and linked to the Tupamaros) and the Chilean filmmaker Miguel Littin (ex-director of Chile Films in the first months of Salvador Allende’s government and associated to MIR). Also the director of the Pesaro Festival, Lino Micciché, attacked Solanas’ position. In fact, Micciché headed the most aggressive criticisms against the director of The Hour of the Furnaces since he questioned the lack of acknowledgment of the obvious movement to the right by Perón and his third government. The interesting point is that the Italian legitimated his attack remembering that six years before, as host of the international premiere of the film in Pesaro 68, he (Micciché) had been in charge of defending the Peronist option, explaining to his colleagues in the Italian and European classic left (communist and socialist) the complexities of the Argentine Peronism, the importance of its working and popular base, as well as the process of revolutionary radicalization that the Peronist movement was experiencing at the end of the decade of the 1960s. However, six years later in Montreal, Micciché questioned Solanas precisely for the lack of dialectics in his presentation, the lack of acknowledgement of the contradictions within Peronism between its left and right wings, as well as of the increasing influence that, in 1974, the latter had gained with Peron’s support. Micciché questioned ironically, and in a provocative way, the confusion of comparing the “dictatorship of the proletariat” with “the dictatorship of general Perón”. This polemic of 1974 – long and including other personalities of political cinema from all over the world attending – accounts for the endurance of the debates on Peronism in years after Pesaro 68. In this sense, it is important to realize that, beyond these and other arguments or maybe precisely because of them, in this period, The Hour of the Furnaces and the manifesto Towards a Third Cinema gained a strong level of influence in the debates about political cinema worldwide. It is significant that the Rencontres in Montreal – perhaps the largest event of political cinema worldwide in this period (the long 60s.) – used as epigraph of its announcement a citation from the Argentine manifesto: precisely the one that linked together the struggles in the Third World with those that were taking place inside the First World55. In fact, the organisers and several critics proposed the event as the General Estates of Third Cinema, a sort of widening to militant cinema worldwide of the notion originated in France around 68 and that it had already been considered in Solanas and Getino’s manifesto. Although by 1974 the rise of the Third World was reaching its peak, the thirdworldist influence and with it The Hour of the Furnaces and the manifesto Towards a Third Cinema, will last a little bit longer. The dossier of CinemAction in 1979 testifies to this. At the end of his life, Guy Hennebelle remembered that it was in Montreal 74 where he met Solanas, whose film was considered by all as the “archetype of militant cinema of the time” said Hennebelle. In spite of the differences that he and Solanas could held, some expressed in Montreal too56, Hennebelle will become Solanas’ friend and from then on a ‘propagandist’ for the manifesto57. To a greater or lesser extent, with greater or lesser differences with respect to the Argentine Grupo Cine Liberación, the same will happen with other protagonists of political cinema worldwide mentioned in these pages. ------------------------------------------- References Archivio Audiovisivo del Movimento Operaio e Democratico di Roma Aamod, Il Pci e il cinema tra cultura e propaganda (1959-1979), a cura di Antonio Medici. Roma, Aamod. 2001. Buchsbaum, J. “One, Two … Third Cinemas”, Third Text, Vol. 25, Issue 1, n.108 (2011). Chanan, M., The Politics of Documentary, London, British Film Institute, 2007. Chanan, M., ‘The Changing Geography of Third Cinema’, Screen, Special Latin American Issue, vol. 38-4 (1997), p. 372-88. Del Valle, I. ‘Hacia un tercer cine: del manifiesto al palimpsesto. El ojo que piensa’, Revista de Cine Iberoamericano 3-6 (2012). Elena, A. and M. Mestman, ‘Para un observador lejano. El documental latinoamericano en España’, in P. A. Paranaguá (ed.), El documental en América Latina, Madrid, Editorial Cátedra, 2003, p. 79-92. Fofi, G., Il ’68 senza Lenin, Edizioni e/o, Roma, 1998. Fofi, G., Servi e padroni, Roma, Feltrineli, 1971. Francia, A., Nuevo Cine Latinoamericano en Viña del Mar, Santiago, Ediciones Chile América, 1990. García Espinosa, J. (1968) Pesaro y la nueva izquierda, «Cine cubano», nn. 49-51, pp. 85-92. Gubern, R. Viaje de ida, Barcelona, Editorial Anagrama, 1997. Guevara, A. ‘¿Y si fuera una huella. Epistolario?’, Madrid, Ediciones de Autor, 2008. Hennebelle, G., ‘L´influence du Troiséme Cinéma dans le monde’ (dossier de Cinéma Action), Revue Tiers Monde, Vol. XX, n.79 (1979) Jameson, F., ‘Periodizing the 60s’, in S. Sayres, A. Stephanson, S. Aronowitz, S. and F. Jameson (eds.), The 60s Without Apology, Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press, 1984, p. 178- 209. The volume corresponds to a special issue of Social Text, 3:3 and 4:1 (Spring-Summer, 1984). Reprinted in The Ideologies of Theory, Volume 2 (1988), p. 178-208. Layerle, S., ‘À l´épreuve de l´événement. Cinéma et practiques militants en Mai 68’, in C. Biet and O. Neveux (eds.), Une histoire du spectacle militant (1966-1981), Paris, L´entretemps, 2007, p. 145-157. Linares, A., El cine militante’, Madrid, Castellote Editor, 1976. Mestman, M., ‘Estados Generales del Tercer Cine. Los documentos de Montreal’, Special Issue of Cuadernos Rehime, n. 3, (2014) Buenos Aires, Red de Historia de los Medios-UBA and Editorial Prometeo. Mestman, M., ‘Algiers-Buenos Aires-Montreal: Thirdworldist Links in the Creation of the Latin American Filmmakers Committee (1974)’, in M. Mestman and M. Salazkina (guest eds.), Montreal, 1974: Rencontres Internationales pour un Nouveau Cinema, Special Issue of the Canadian Journal of Film Studies, Vol. 24, No. 2. (2015). Micciché, L., ‘Pesaro 1965-1976: Una mostra e le sue contraddizioni’ (Opening of the 12th edition of the Mostra), 1976. Ramonet, I., La Golosina Visual, Barcelona, Editorial Debate, 2000. Stam, R., ‘The Hour of the Furnaces and the Two Avant-Gardes’, Millennium Film Journal, n. 7-9, Fall-Winter (1980-1981). Willemen, P., ‘The Third Cinema Question: Notes and Reflections’, in J. Pines and P. Willemen (eds.), Questions of Third Cinema, Londres, BFI, 1989. Zimmer, C. Cine y Política, Salamanca, Editorial Sígueme, 1976. Notes 1 Chanan provides a detailed commentary on the ideas of Gabriel and of the tensions during the conference in Edinburgh. On the conference, see Pines and Willemen, 1989. They are two ‘final’ moments of discussion, still under the influence of the third worldism of the long 60s. (particularly in the first case); this influence will be more and more displaced in the world scene, as Chanan (1997) observed in reference to Edinburgh 1986. On the eclipse of the Third Cinema model, see also Chanan, 2007: 11. 2 3 In this essay, I will only refer to the distribution of The Hour of the Furnaces in Europe, USA and Canada, following Festivals and militant use of the film. I have explored the film’s place in Latin America and the third world in other texts elsewhere. Fernando Solanas’s interview in the magazine Cinema 60. Anno X (1970), n.73-74: 19-20. 4 5 See Ruberto and Wilson’s chapter in this volume. 6 Birri, 1968. 7 In any case, the reporter at Cannes centred her main questioning on the Argentine Institute of Cinematography "that insists in not answering the invitations of the president of the festival and does not send any official films, as if our country had died and our talents disappeared”. See "La Prensa", 21/5/69. Also the newpaper: "La Nación", 18/5/69 and "La Razón", 15/5/69. 8 The directors looked for a certificate of nationality for the film in other countries with the objective of distributing it beyond alternative circuits. A few months after its screening in Pesaro, Solanas wrote to Alfredo Guevara, director of the Cuban film institute ICAIC: “(…) After coming back from Havana, serious news awaited me: they don’t give us the certificate of nationality in Belgium either (…) The problem is at breaking point (…) We have tried in different ways in Italy, France, Sweden and there is no way given the political nature of the film and the fact that all those countries have reciprocity agreements with the Argentine government and friendly diplomatic relations. The object of this letter is to ask about the possibility that you could recognise it as a film originating in Cuba and with Cuban nationality (…). I am aware that I am asking for a lot but I do it with the trust typical among comrades (…)” (letter from Solanas to Guevara. Rome, 10/1/1969. In: Guevara 2008; 180). 9 The Conference (Reseña) of Latin American Cinema at Santa Margarita Ligure was promoted by the Centre for Studies Europa-América del Colombianum in Genoa. In 1960 and 1961 it took place in Santa Margherita, Ligure; in 1962 and 1963 in Sestri Levante and in 1965 (last edition) in Genoa. For its part, the New Latin American Cinema attended the Muestra Internacional del Cine Libre de Porretta/International Encounter of Free Cinema in Porretta since its first edition in 1960, particularly in those in 1962, 1964, 1966 and 1969. Micciché, 1976. On the discussions on the ‘alternative circuit’ in Italy, see the text of Mino Argentieri, “Il circuito alternativo”, in Cinema 60, Anno X (1970), n.78-79-80: 98-109. 10 11 Author’s interview with Goffredo Fofi, Roma, 11/9/2000. 12 The proposal developed these issues in 11 points and was presented to the assembly by Valentino Orsini, Pio Baldelli, the Taviani brothers, Alberto Filippi and Gianni Amico, among others. 13 The organisers of Pesaro had been preparing the 68 edition with an important and varied participation of Latin American films in projections and round table discussions. One had been programmed on “Latin American Cinema, culture as action”. At the same time, there was a special programme of American ‘Newsreels’ curated by Robert Kramer and the urgent militant practice of Cesare Zavattini was also present with his "Cinegiornali liberi" as well as cinematographies from Eastern Europe. García Espinosa, “Pesaro y la Nueva Izquierda/Pesaro and the New Left”, Cine Cubano 49/51: 85-92 and «Declaraciones del Cine Latinoamericano en Pesaro/Declarations of Latin American Cinema in Pesaro», p. 84. 14 I wrote about the The Hour of the Furnaces’ presence in Pesaro 1968 in other essays. Recently: Mestman, M. “L´ora dei forni e il cinema politico italiano prima e dopo il 15 ‘68”, in: Imago. Film studies and media, Roma, Issue 15, 2017 (Ivelise Perniola and Luca Caminati guest editors). 16 Comments by Micciché and Torri to the author, Rome, 2000. And Micciché, 1976 17 Mino Argentieri was one of the members of the board of the Mostra of Pesaro, director of the magazine Cinemasessanta and responsible for the film committee of the Italian Communist Party (PCI) since 1964. In an interview by Antonio Medici, Argentieri gave many details of the 1968 events at Pesaro. He spooke about the revolt during that edition of the Mostra and the subsequent agreement of the organizers of the Mostra with the demonstrators to continue with the Festival and the projections in parallel with the activity of the assembly. In this sense, Argentieri remember his negotiations (and those of Giuliani De Negri) with the prefect of the city for the liberation of Orsini and the other Latin American filmmakers detained in jail because of the initial protests in Pesaro city. He also remembered his demand to the Communist Party in Rome to send a student leader to infiltrate the demonstrators in the assembly of the festival in order to calm the atmosphere (Conversation between Antonio Medici and Mino Argentieri, in Aamod [2001: 64–87]). See an immediate reading of Pesaro 68 in Fofi, 1971 (specially the chapter “Después del 68/After 68). Subsequent texts show more nuanced revisions, but always critical, of the traditional left wing parties in those years and their filmic referents. 18 19 Interview with the author, Roma, 2000. 20 See Humberto Pérez-Blanco’s chapter in this volume. 21 Letter from Rodolfo Pasquali (from the Centro Documentazione Cinema e Lotta di Classe de Roma) to the director of the Centro Universitario Teatrale di Urbino. Roma, 4/1/1972. Vico Codella Archive. 22 See Clara Garavelli chapter in this volume. 23 Zimmer, 1976:178. Karmitz held The Hour in high esteem. See the interview with the director in Cinéma 70, n.47, June 1970: 75-84. 24 The manifesto was published in issue 3 of the French edition of Tricontinental (1969), the internationalist magazine published by the Organization of Solidarity with the Peoples of Asia, Africa and Latin America. In recent years, Jonathan Buchsbaum (2011) and Ignacio del Valle (2012) highlighted the diverse emphasis and content found in the different versions, in several languages or in new documents supporting the same theses. 25 We need to remember also the dialogue between Solanas and J.L.Godard published from 1969 in several magazines. 26 Among them: Cahiers du Cinéma, Positif, Jeune Cinéma, Écran, Cinétique, Le Monde, La Nouvelle Critique, Afrique-Asie, Cinéma d’Aujourd’hui, Cinéma Politique. As example of the impact of the film and of the manifesto among French militant critics, it is worth noting that the last magazine mentioned, publication of a collective of the same name, published in 1975 the completed manifesto Towards a Third Cinema and carried a debate for four editions. 27 Guy Hennebelle, “Argentine à l´heure des brasiers”. Jeune Cinéma nº 37, March 1969, pp.6-10. 28 “La Otra Puerta de la Distribución. Entrevista con Rodolfo Broullón/The Other Door of Distribution. Interview with Rodolfo Broullón”, in Cine Cubano, nº 98, p.87-89. On the history of the group, see Buchsbaum, 2015. 29 Letters by Gino Lofredo and Rodolfo Broullón (Third World Cinema Group) to the Argentine filmmaker Raymundo Gleyzer in April 1972. 30 In Hennebelle, 1979: 627-629. 31 He mentioned as example the film by Arthur Lamothe, Le Mépris n´Aura qu´un Temps/Hell no Longer, that had been distributed in trade unions in Quebec and also recognised as ‘militant cinema’ in international events but that was questioned, however, in its own country by comparison with the model of The Hour of the Furnaces. In 1974 André Pâquet invited Solanas and will give a prominent place to the theory of Third Cinema during a big event on political cinema worldwide in Montreal to which I will return later 32 Magazine Champ Libre, Montreal, nº 1, July 1971, p. 134-135. 33 “Pratique de diffusion. Catalogue de films politiques. L´heure des brasiers”. Magazine Champ Libre, Montreal, nº 3, November 1972; p. 97-99. And “Luttes ouvrieres. Fiches critiques: L´heure des brasiers”, Champ Libre, Montreal, nº 4, spring 1973, p. 83-84. 34 See del Valle Dávila’s chapter in this volume. 35 In another text I referred at greater length to this links. Together with the already mentioned above, here I only remember other examples: such the acknowledgment of the value of the film in the same circumstances by renowned political filmmakers such as Marco Bellochio, Ugo Gregoretti, Ansano Gianarelli, among many others. The Hour is mentioned also even as a possible alternative in the conversations between filmmakers recorded at the Cinegiornale Libero número 1, of Cesare Zavattini (1968). 36 Comment to the author, Rome, 2000. Also, in the correspondence sustained by the Centro Documentazione with the groups from other parts of the country (as the one cited in the epigraph) it is possible to read a request, not infrequent, for the Argentine film. Renzo Rossellini remembers that San Diego distributed a version of two hours of The Hour of the Furnaces, a synthesis of parts I and II. In 1971, San Diego will lend its equipment for the completion of three films by Cine Liberación (Renzo Rossellini’s comment to the author, Rome, 2000). 37 Andrés Linares (1976) stresses the interest for the call to the active participation of the spectator. Ramonet (2000: 147-149) mentioned the influence of the film on Spanish filmmakers. Gubern (1997: 276) commented its inclusion in the militant circuit in Catalonia. (The comments here about The Hour of the Furnaces in Spain are taken and in some cases expand those on a previous article co-written by the author and Alberto Elena: 2003). 38 Author’s interview with Joan Antoni González i Serret (organizer of El Volti) and with Adonio González Mateos (militant of the trade union Comisiones Obreras). Barcelona, June 2000. 39 It is not possible to mention here all those differences. But, for example, one of the groups that used the film more often in the militant circuit, like the already mentioned CIP in Quebec, criticised the film for “resolving little of what was explained” and to propose a “romantic and abstract” idea of Revolution. (“Luttes ouvrieres. Fiches critiques: L´heure des brasiers”. Champ Libre, n.4, 1973, pp.83-84. The North American critic Gary Crowds, founder of Third World Cinema Group, mentioned the “disastrous romanticism of guerrilla cinema” defended in the Manifesto Towards a Third Cinema. (Gary Crowds in: Hennebelle and Mignot-Lefebvre 1979: 627–29). Other examples could be mentioned. 40 Interview by the critics Augusto Martínez Torres and Miguel Marías with Octavio Getino. Nuestro Cine, n. 89, Madrid, September 1969; p.45. 41 See Clara Kriger’s chapter in this volume. 42 That year, in a review in the Spanish magazine Film Ideal, Ramón Font, who had seen the film in France, commented that its actual duration (1969) was much shorter than the one exhibited at Pesaro. 43 Crowds in Hennebelle, 1979. 44 In those years, Schumann had frequent contacts with the so-called New Latin American Cinema and he places the first showings of the Hour of the Furnaces by the German Cinemateque in the days immediately following Pesaro 68. That is, three months before its official participation in the Manheim Festival. The screenings had a great impact in both cases. From there, he remembers its distribution by the circuit created by the Cinemateque that privileged the first part (the others were screened not very often). But, at the same time, he mentions that the television showings (shown several times until the end of the 1970s with a total audience, he estimates, of 400,000 to 500,000 spectators) included a summary version of 40 minutes of the second and third parts (In: Hennebelle, 1979: 331-333). 45 See, for example, the review by Piero Spila in Cinema e Film (Vol. II, núm.5-6, 1968: 49-50) on the screening in Pesaro. A few years later, the critic Ciriaco Tiso will reject the film for placing its axis on ‘the visceral’, on the passionate and irrational participation that will end up falling into sentimentality (since “the revolution must be a logical and rational fact”), and of course, for its exaltation of a Peronism that “is pure fascism” according to him (Filmcritica, n. 222, February 1972: 84-104). 46 See Pablo Piedras’ chapter in this volume. 47 In the first case, for example, some of the opinions expressed in a debate organised by the magazine La Nouvelle Critique (“´L`heure des brasiers´. La lutte des classes en Argentine et la stratégie révolutionnaire”. La Nouvelle Critique, n.28, september 1969, pp. 31-36). In later years a filmmaker and key theorist of the French communist party like Jean-Patrick Lebel remembered the arguments generated by the film within the communist movement about the traditional parties of the left’s strategies of ‘creating fronts’, the primary value of armed struggles and, of course, Peronism (CinémAction, n.101, 2001: 48). 48 Respectively, Fernando Lara, “Pesaro, año IV. Un festival violento y confuso día tras día. Crónica de los incidentes de la Mostra del Cine Libre y de Oposición” (Nuestro Cine nº 74, June 1968, p. 29); and Fernando Lara, “Pesaro, año IV. En busca de una nueva dialéctica” (Nuestro Cine nº 75, July 1968, p.22). It should not be strange the radical anti-Peronist of this review if we take into account that Perón was in exile in Spain, under the rule of Francisco Franco, although the relations between Perón and the dictator were more complex than it is generally believed. Other Spanish reviews took a very different direction from Lara’s. For example, Ramón Font in “Situación del Nuevo Cine”, Film-Ideal, n.214-215, 1969; pp. 23-25). Font characterised the film as “the first film for a new society”, “passionate and lucid”, “a crucial film in the history of cinema and in History”. And in opposition to Lara, he argued that the film “extracts from the Peronist experience linked to the popular classes the guidelines for its future overcoming”. 49 50 Louis Marcorelles. “F. E. Solanas: La hora de los hornos. L’épreuve du direct”, in Cahiers du Cinéma, Paris, nº 210, March 1969. See also, for the Italian case, another important interview with Solanas in Ombre Rosse, where the problem of the “European look” on Peronism is discussed (“Fernando Solanas. Il cinema come fucile / Intervistamanifesto col regista”, a cura di Gianni Volpi, Piero Arlorio, Goffredo Fofi e Gianfranco Torri; Ombre Rosse, n.7, april 1969, pp.3-23, particularly pp.16-17). Away from those years, some scholars dealt with the issue of the treatment of Peronism in the film. Although these works are not the topic of this essay, it is worth mentioning that after its earlier work on The Hour of the Furnaces and the two avant-gardes, Robert Stam will return to the film (Stam and Shohat, 1994) and, among other issues, he affirms: “The film rightly identifies Perón as a Third World nationalist avant la lettre rather than the “fascist dictator” of Eurocentric mythology”. And he also pointed out that the film mentioned the historical mistakes of Peronism. 51 Interview by Augusto Martínez Torres and Miguel Marías in Madrid, May 1969, in Nuestro Cine nº 89, September 1969: 40-47; and interview by Joaquín Jordá, in Triunfo n 473, 26 June 1971: 12-16. 52 Linares, 1976: 144 53 Its projection in this small festival of committed films (in line with Pesaro), in the middle of the Spanish transition, was still striking. Carlos Heredero, for example, considered the film “the zenith of the Latin American contribution” to the event. In Cinema 2002, n.35, January 1978; 30. 54 In: “La Hora de los Hornos. Tres Preguntas a su Realizador”, mimeo, 1977, 2ps. Mimeographed document in boxes of the Festival de Benalmádena held at the archive at the library of the Spanish Cinemateque (Filmoteca Española) in Madrid. In the same direction goes the memories of the festival director about that decision. Julio Diamante (interviews with the author, Madrid, August 2000). 55 The chosen fragment reads: “The anti-imperialist struggle of the peoples of the Third World and of their equivalent inside the imperialist countries constitutes today the axis of the world revolution. Third cinema is, in our opinion, the cinema that recognises in that struggle the most gigantic cultural, scientific, and artistic manifestation of our time, the possibility of constructing a liberated personality with each people as the starting point – in a word, the decolonisation of culture.” (programme to announce to the Rencontres, quoted in:“Rencontres Internationales pour un Nouveau Cinema. Cahier 1. Projects et résolutions”, Montreal, 1975, p.3.) 56 The distance (political and cinematographic) expressed there will be reflected a little bit later in the prologue Solanas wrote for the Spanish edition in two volumes of Hennebelle’s “National Cinemas Against the Imperialism of Hollywood”. In spite of this, he stressed his friendship and “basic agreement”. 57 Cinémaction, n.110, 2004; 16.