Cannes Hidden Gem: ‘The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo' Is a Modern Western About Family (Exclusive Clip)
Is love a danger, or will it save the day? Chilean writer-director Diego Céspedes explores that question and the theme of family and community as a refuge in his feature debut The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo, which world premieres in Cannes' Un Certain Regard section on Thursday.
It tells the story of Lidia, 11, 'who grows up in a loving queer family pushed to the edge of an unwelcoming dusty mining town,' according to a synopsis. 'They are blamed for a mysterious illness that's starting to spread – said to be passed through a single gaze, when one man falls in love with another.'
More from The Hollywood Reporter
Cannes Fest Draws Unusually High Number of Emmy Hopefuls
Entertainment Squad Takes 'Walter, Grace & The Submarine' for North America (Exclusive)
Kristen Stewart Wants to "Crash and Burn" in Cannes: "We Barely Finished This Movie"
Check out an exclusive clip for the movie, produced by Quijote Films in Chile and Les Valseurs in France, with sales being handled by Charades, here.
The modern western, starring Tamara Cortés, Matías Catalán, and Paula Dinamarca, may be set in the Chilean desert in the 1980s, well before the 29-year-old was born. But the queer director knows the challenges his characters face, including violence, fear and hatred, from his family's experience.
'My family comes from the suburbs of Chile's capital, Santiago, and they rented this little hairdresser salon and hired gay people to cut hair. At that time, it was just gay people cutting hair,' he tells THR. 'My mother was very close to them, and all of them died of AIDS. And I remember that my mother didn't have much information about it. We just heard that it was a very dangerous thing that can be transmitted very easily. It was just scary.'
That is part of the context in which Céspedes created his story. 'I was also inspired by real people and how dissidents and transgender people, when they are abandoned by society, create communities and families,' he explains. 'That is special for me and the core of the film, the creation of a real family that is not sharing blood.'
Finding Lidia took a year of auditions before the creative team hit the jackpot with Cortés. 'It was her first time around trans women and such a diverse group,' the director recalls. 'But when we put them together, she was very comfortable and very natural. And she has this mix of an adult attitude and also this kind of humor.'
The idea that a gaze could transmit AIDS is not one Céspedes ever heard anyone suggest. 'It's a total creation, but in real life, I have heard very similar things,' he says before sharing thoughts fit for the post-truth world. 'There was ignorance at that time, and even now. When you don't have access to information, you create explanations, because us human beings need an explanation for everything. So, I thought that in this fictional town, what they think about the disease can be something that does not confront reality. We're having sex between men, and that's the main way of transmission. But why would we say that, if we can create another explanation that fits our way of seeing life?'
In that sense, The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo is a plea to face reality and others. In fact, the need for being open to encountering people who are different is a core message that Céspedes feels is very timely. 'We grow up in a generation where people are taking very hard positions on who's the bad one and who's the good one, but I think we are missing that conversation and that looking each other in the eye.'
Diego Céspedes
Is the filmmaker optimistic that even in a divided world, humans can build real connections? 'That's a possibility, even if we don't see it too much in our modern society,' he tells THR. 'As human beings, we can talk, and we can find agreement when we look each other in the eye. We need to talk more.'
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
'The Goonies' Cast, Then and Now
"A Nutless Monkey Could Do Your Job": From Abusive to Angst-Ridden, 16 Memorable Studio Exec Portrayals in Film and TV
The 10 Best Baseball Movies of All Time, Ranked
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
31 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
With ‘Dogma's' re-release, director Kevin Smith's prayers for his cult classic have been answered
For more than a quarter century, director Kevin Smith has tried to resurrect 'Dogma,' his religious satire about two fallen angels looking to get back into heaven. Recently, his prayers for the 1999 comedy were finally answered. On Thursday, the movie got a theatrical re-release across 1,500 AMC Theatres screens in honor of its 25th anniversary. Technically, the milestone was last year. But the second coming of a movie that brought us one of Ben Affleck and Matt Damon's best on-screen collaborations and an A-list comedic ensemble — including George Carlin, Chris Rock, Janeane Garofalo and Alan Rickman — not to mention the meme-worthy, winking 'Buddy Christ,' warrants a long-awaited hallelujah. 'It's got a good legacy to it,' Smith said of the film. 'It's become the 'umbrella film' for me. The umbrella film is the movie that no matter what you do, even if you make s— that people don't like, they won't crucify you — pun intended — because you made a movie that they like.' Though the sparkling period of Smith's career is largely defined by 1994's 'Clerks' and 1997's 'Chasing Amy,' his fourth film, 'Dogma,' steeped in irreverence and hilarity centered around his former Catholic faith, is still considered one of his classics. The movie debuted at Cannes in 1999. He returned to the renowned film festival last month, when the comedy played in the Cannes Classics section, just days before sitting down with The Times on camera to discuss 'Dogma's' whirlwind re-release. In the interview, the director, writer and actor recounts how the movie was saved by filmmaker and actor Alessandra Williams, who raised money to buy the film from Miramax earlier this year, decades after it was acquired and shelved by disgraced producer Harvey Weinstein. Weinstein sold Smith's film, along with a trove of others, to Williams to help pay for his legal defense, Smith said. In collaboration with Iconic Events, the film has since been remastered in 4K for its screening tour and is being shown in select AMC theaters. Smith is well-seasoned when it comes to touring his old films, pairing the screenings with Q&As and stand-up performances throughout the live presentations. It took little time for him to book a sold-out, 20-city tour aimed at getting fans fired up to come see 'Dogma' once again under much different (and safer) circumstances. 'Even with getting people aware of the movie this time around, it's not as fraught with peril as it was back in the day,' Smith said, referring to the death threats, protests and 400,000 pieces of hate mail he said the movie garnered from Christian extremists who denounced what they believed to be the film's mockery of their faith. 'You Jews better take that money you stole from us and start investing in flak jackets,' Smith said while closing his eyes and reciting one of the letters from memory. 'We're coming because we're coming in there with shotguns. Signed, Your Brothers in Christ.' Though the controversy of the film has definitely waned, the inspiration behind the film remains steadfast, Smith said. 'To me, it plays like a kid really trying to celebrate his faith after having grown up in a church where every Sunday, everyone seemed to be mourning it. So I think [people hopefully see it] for what it is. It's a love letter to spirituality.'
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
Sarah Michelle Gellar Says Children of Original ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer' Actors Auditioned for Reboot
Sarah Michelle Gellar revealed that she saw some familiar names on the audition roster for the Buffy the Vampire Slayer reboot. The actress who played Buffy Summers in the original series, which ran for seven seasons from 1997 to 2003, recently chatted with Us Weekly with her former Buffy co-star Alyson Hannigan, who portrayed Willow Rosenberg. During the interview, Hannigan confessed, 'I know somebody who auditioned for something on the show.' More from The Hollywood Reporter 'Buffy' Update at Hulu Casts Ryan Kiera Armstrong as the New Slayer 'Ready or Not' Sequel Enlists Sarah Michelle Gellar, Elijah Wood Slay! Inside the Buffy Prom, Where Fans of 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer' Partied Like It Was 1999 However, Gellar also knew some people. 'I know somebody who was on the show whose child auditioned on the show,' she revealed. 'I know a few people from the show whose children came in.' 'It better not have been one of my kids,' Hannigan quipped in response. Though the Wolf Pack star didn't reveal the names of those who auditioned, last week it was announced that Star Wars: Skeleton Crew actress Ryan Kiera Armstrong has been cast in a lead role in Hulu's pilot for the reboot. The new show will also see Gellar reprise her role as Buffy Summers. 'From the moment I saw Ryan's audition, I knew there was only one girl that I wanted by my side,' Gellar said in a statement regarding Armstrong's casting. 'To have that kind of emotional intelligence, and talent, at such a young age is truly gift. The bonus is that her smile lights up even the darkest room.' Most details on Armstrong's role, as well as the show itself, are being kept under wraps. The original series, which also starred Nicholas Brendon, Anthony Head, James Marsters and Emma Caulfield Ford, followed Buffy Summers, destined to slay vampires, demons and other infernal creatures, as she dealt with her life of fighting evil, with the help of her friends. A premiere date for the reboot has yet to be revealed. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 'The Studio': 30 Famous Faces Who Play (a Version of) Themselves in the Hollywood-Based Series 22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Ready or Not: Here I Come Sequel' Lands April 2026 Release Date in Theaters
Searchlight Pictures' sequel to its 2019 horror comedy pic Ready or Not will hit theaters April 10, 2026, the studio said Thursday. Ready or Not: Here I Come sees Sarah Michelle Gellar and Elijah Wood join series star Samara Weaving. More from The Hollywood Reporter Sarah Michelle Gellar Says Children of Original 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer' Actors Auditioned for Reboot 'Ready or Not' Sequel Enlists Sarah Michelle Gellar, Elijah Wood Bill Murray Says 'Being Mortal' Misconduct Was "Light" and Is "Still Funny," Slams Disney for Film's Cancellation Radio Silence's Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett are back to direct the follow-up, as are writers Guy Busick and R. Christopher Murphy. The movie, which begun production in earlier this spring, has rounded out its cast with Kathryn Newton, Shawn Hatosy, Néstor Carbonell, Kevin Durand (Abigail) and Olivia Cheng, as well as acclaimed horror filmmaker David Cronenberg. Ready or Not: Here I Come is produced by Tripp Vinson, James Vanderbilt, Bradley J. Fischer and William Sherak. Executive producers are Chad Villella, Tara Farney, Greg Denny, Paul Neinstein, Busick, Murphy and Weaving. Richard Ruiz and Cornelia Burleigh are overseeing the project for Searchlight. The longline is being kept under tight wraps. Ready or Not starred Weaving as a bride who learns of her new family's wedding night ritual where a murderous game is played, all to appease an ancient family deal with the devil. The film was a moderate success critically and commercially, grossing $28 million at the domestic box office and more than $57 million against a $6 million budget. Tripp Vinson, James Vanderbilt, Bradley J. Fischer and William Sherak are producing the sequel. In April, Searchlight president Matthew Greenfield said of the sequel: 'We're beyond excited to make another film with the phenomenal Radio Silence. With Ready or Not: Here I Come, we get to go on another ride with the amazing Samara Weaving, mix in awesome new voices and bring audiences a fresh take that's every bit as twisted and fun as the first one. This is for those who've been waiting, and those who didn't see it coming.' Best of The Hollywood Reporter 13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts Hollywood Stars Who Are One Award Away From an EGOT 'The Goonies' Cast, Then and Now