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DEVOTEE: Ruffinelli has watched
half of his 9,000 movies.
Rod Searcey |
jorge ruffinelli may know
more about Latin American film than, well, anyone. About
a decade ago, the professor of Spanish turned his focus
to movies, and he estimates he has watched more than
4,000. He now has a spot alongside Clint Eastwood and
Danny Glover on the advisory board of the San Francisco
Film Society, which presents the area’s international
film festival. Ruffinelli also is writing the first
encyclopedia of Latin American cinema. Volume one is
set to be published in Spanish next year.
STANFORD: How did
you become interested in Latin American film?
It’s not difficult to explain because I believe
that almost everybody likes film. I was a filmgoer as
a child, but I never thought about studying film. I
was born in Uruguay. Then, in 1974, I went to work at
the University of Veracruz in Mexico. Over there, I
had the opportunity to be present at the filming of
a film by a Chilean director. I spent almost a month
with the crew, writing a book. That movie was based
on Nobel prize-winning writer Gabriel García
Márquez. It was fun to be there and just to be
witnessing everything, interviewing every actor and
making new friends with everybody.
At the same time, I had a long experience with writers,
Latin American writers. I was used to being with them.
But then I got tired because I had read all the books.
[Laughs.] I wanted not to do a change of career, but
to enrich myself intellectually and aesthetically.
What is the difference between Latin American
films and American films?
The main problem here is that films or movies are perceived
as only enter-tainment, not as a form of art. In Latin
America, most of the films are not economically, financially
feasible. They are made because people love movies.
There is a different rhythm—movies are slower.
They try to make you think. Now lately, there are some
very funny movies, some very entertaining movies. When
Latin American films don’t care about entertainment
value, I believe that is a defect. They need to entertain
and at the same time keep a high degree of aesthetics
and focus on ethical issues.
How many films do you own?
Right now I have 8,000, almost 9,000 Latin American
films. I would say that I have seen half of them. I’ve
written on 2,500. Ten, 11 years ago I decided to pay
more attention to what I was watching. I decided to
watch one film a day and write at least a three-page
essay on every one—so at this moment I have written
something like 7,000 pages about Latin American films.
Do you have a favorite?
No. [Laughs.] After watching 2,500, you have many
favorites.
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