With Frank Pineda, Florence Jaugey and Jonathan Buchsbaum, a professor at CUNY Queens College and author of Cinema and the Sandinistas: Filmmaking in Revolutionary Nicaragua, 1979-1990 (University of Texas Press, 2003).
With Frank Pineda, Florence Jaugey and Jonathan Buchsbaum, a professor at CUNY Queens College and author of Cinema and the Sandinistas: Filmmaking in Revolutionary Nicaragua, 1979-1990 (University of Texas Press, 2003).
Née en 1959, à Nice, étudie le théâtre à l’Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Arts et Techniques du Théâtre. De 1979 à 1989, elle travaille comme comédienne. En 1990, au Nicaragua, elle monte avec Frank Pineda, cinéaste nicaraguayen, une maison de production Camila Films et produit et réalise différents courts métrages et documentaires. De 1993 à …
“Cinema Alcazar”, “El hombre de una sola nota” and “La isla de los niños perdidos”, three films of the programme “Florence Jaugey and Frank Pineda : at work”, Cinéma du réel 2016, were programmed at the Festival Biarritz Amérique Latine, Biarritz (France, September – October 2016).
The international jury, composed of Michel Khleifi, filmmaker, Edith Scob, comedian, Abderrahmane Sissako, filmmaker, Petr Vaclav, filmmaker and Cathie Lévy, filmmaker, awarded the following prizes: Cinéma du Réel Grand Prix:Xiwang zhi lu, Ying Ning Short Film Award:Sicionykste, Kornelijus Matuzevicius and Diana Matuzeviciene Joris Ivens Award:Xue luo Yili, Lei Feng SCAM International Award:La Isla de los niños perdidos, Florence Jaugey …
“They are only 20 years old and have been sentenced to thirty years of prison. La isla de los niños perdidos tells the story of ten young inmates who take part in a video workshop in Nicaragua’s largest prison.” (Florence Jaugey)
“The daily life of policewomen and social workers in a Police Commissary for Women and Children in Managua. Women and children come, talk, denounce and demand that their rights be respected.” (Florence Jaugey)
“In Nicaragua, four hundred children on average are born each day, one hundred of whom born to teenage mothers. This documentary collection portrays these girls’ life: 14-year-old Kenia who lives in Managua; Blanca, aged 15, a country girl from the mountains; and Viviana, aged 16, who is a Mískito Indian from the North Atlantic Region.” …
“When Madame Rosa came to live here, after the earthquake, everything was in ruins. People say that it used to be a film theatre, but she’s been living there for years and she’s never seen a film in her life.” (Florence Jaugey)
SCAM INTERNATIONAL AWARD “Aged twenty, fights, drugs and death are part of their lives. Lives reduced to the limits of their barrio, a world with its own laws and where there is little room for hope. (…) They have been condemned because they broke our laws. Even though they now regret their acts, the price …