On the heels of Philips Cinema 21:9 TV set’s “Carousel” winning the Film Grand Prix at the Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival (SHOOT, 6/28), editor Paul Hardcastle, who cut the project via London-based house Trim for Tribal DDB Amsterdam, has joined The Whitehouse for stateside representation.
Based in the U.K., Hardcastle remains editor/partner at Trim, which continues to handle him for European work.
“I met [Whitehouse partner/editor] John Smith six years ago and we stayed friendly,” Hardcastle related. “I have always been aware of The Whitehouse as one of the most established, leading companies and so working with them was a bit of a no-brainer. They not only seem to know where they’re going, but offer strong versatility and the ability to keep your options open with locations in L.A., New York, Chicago and here in London.”
Born in Soho, London, Hardcastle got his start at now defunct editorial shop Swordfish in London, assisting Tony Kerns (now at Peepshow) and Art Jones (now at Work Post.) For the past five years, he’s been partner and co-founder at Trim. Hardcastle was immersed in the world of filmmaking as a child, as his father was founder of London’s Museum of the Moving Image (MOMI) and ran the art film repertory National Film Theatre (now the BFI).
Oscar Winners “I’m Still Here” and “Emilia Pérez” Shed Light On Latin America’s Thousands of People Who’ve Disappeared
If there is a still open wound in Latin America, it is that of the tens of thousands of disappeared people and decadeslong pain that has accumulated in parts of the region such as Mexico and Colombia.
Two visions of the trauma had a central role at the 97th Academy Awards: the Brazilian film "Ainda Estou Aqui" ("I'm Still Here"), which tells the drama of the family of a leftist former congressman who disappeared in 1971 at the height of the military dictatorship; and the musical "Emilia Pérez," about a fictional Mexican drug lord who leaves a life of crime to become a transgender woman and searcher for the disappeared in Mexico.
"We hope that in this way the society will be sensitized," said activist Indira Navarro, who directs the Guerreros Buscadores de Jalisco collective in Mexico and has been searching for her brother, who disappeared in the northern state of Sonora nine years ago.
The Academy Awards' recognition of the films, both of which were nominated in multiple categories, was an unparalleled opportunity to make the problem visible, Navarro said.
"I'm Still Here," by Brazilian Walter Salles, won the Oscar in the category of best international film. "Emilia Pérez," by renowned French director Jacques Audiard, was this year's most-nominated film and won in the categories of best original song and best supporting actress for Zoe Saldaña.
Salles and Audiard's films also had a common denominator of disappearances in Latin America: impunity.
The story behind "I'm Still Here"
"I'm Still Here" was inspired by the book "Ainda Estou Aqui" by Marcelo Rubens Paiva, son of the disappeared former congressman Rubens Paiva. More than five decades after he was taken from his Rio de Janeiro home and... Read More