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Toss Me a Dime
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Toss Me a Dime
IDFA 2014

Toss Me a Dime

Tire dié
Fernando Birri
Argentina
1958
33 min
n.a.
Festival history
While the media tend to concentrate on the bustling modern city life in 1950s Santa Fe, Argentina, there’s very little prosperity to be seen in the district known as Tire Dié. All we see is poverty, hunger and unemployment. Between 1956 and 1958, filmmaker Fernando Birri and a group of students captured this neighborhood on film. opens with aerial shots of the big city and a voice-over providing general information. But then the camera zooms in on daily life in underprivileged areas, filming at eye level the many children who wait for the train every afternoon to beg passengers for a little money. Birri is known as the founder of New Latin American Cinema, a movement that emerged in the late 1950s and was influenced by Neorealism in Italy (where Birri studied film) and as a counterbalance to Hollywood. Due to lack of money and resources for film production, filmmakers were looking for new forms of cinema, including documentary. They chose a critical approach that reflected the complex social and political reality in which poverty, hunger and suppression were part of the daily lives of the common people.
Credits
Screening copy
    Argentinian National Institute of Cinema and Audiovisual Arts (INCAA)
    Argentinian National Institute of Cinema and Audiovisual Arts (INCAA)
Production
    Instituto de Cinematografia de la Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Edgardo Pallero
    Instituto de Cinematografia de la Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Edgardo Pallero