Guatemalan actor Enrique Salanic has been blocked from entering the United States ahead of the U.S. premiere of his award-winning movie "José," in which he stars.
The film premieres in New York City on Jan. 31, but according to distributor Outsider Pictures, Salanic is still campaigning to be granted entry to the U.S. "José" has received critical praise so far, having already won the Queer Lion at the Venice Film Festival and a handful of other awards.
Attempts to bring the actor to the states have been fruitless. According to Outsider, the U.S. embassy in Guatemala has twice denied his non-immigrant visa applications, citing a concern that he is a "flight risk" because he lives with his parents in Guatemala and has no permanent address in the U.S.
"Denying Enrique Salanic his entry visa to promote his work in a film produced, financed and distributed by American citizens and companies represents just one way in which the current administration's immigration rules impact U.S. businesses, and it perpetuates the negative impression the world has of America. Denying entry to a man who has already successfully studied in the U.S. just because he is from Guatemala is unjust and cruel," Outsider Pictures' Paul Hudson said.
Robert Rosenberg of Outsider Pictures also told TheWrap, "It broke my heart that such a talented young actor like Enrique, who is the star of our movie, is being thwarted in pursuing his career by our own government in the U.S. Our policies should encourage this kind of ambition and success, not trap Central Americans in their countries, as if they were less than human."
In a statement on the creation of the film — which focuses on Salanic's young, gay character falling in love for the first time while living with his mother in Guatemala — director Li Cheng discussed the movie's cultural relevance.
"'José' is really a page ripped from today's news headlines," he said. "The crises of young people, single mothers and dark-skinned peoples in Guatemala frames the film's story. Guatemala has become an increasingly violent and dangerous place, where more than half the people live in poverty. Indeed most of the children separated from their parents and locked in dog-like cages in Texas (shocking people around the world) are Guatemalan, not Mexican, as is often claimed."
A representative for the embassy did not immediately return a request for comment.
10 Best LGBTQ Films of the 2010s, From 'Moonlight' to 'Call Me by Your Name' (Photos)
Whether a curse or a blessing, "May you live in interesting times" certainly applies to the LGBTQ community -- the past decade saw the legalization of same-sex marriages and the end of the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy, but every advancement has been met with pushback and threats to overturn equal protections under the law. Trans characters (played, for a change, by trans performers) got their largest public spotlight on television shows like "Pose" and "Transparent," while at the same time they remain the targets of violence and of hysterical and reactionary lawmakers. Whatever triumphs and travails the community faced in day-to-day life, their lives and loves continued to be reflected on the big screen; here are some of the decade's greatest examples, listed alphabetically.
Runners-Up: "1985," "Appropriate Behavior," "Booksmart," "BPM," "Cola de Mono," "Drunktown's Finest," "Kiki," "Love, Simon," "Paris 05:59 Théo & Hugo," "Portrait of a Lady on Fire"
"Call Me By Your Name" and "Carol" (2017/2015) One was set in the relatively permissive 1980s and the other in the restrictive 1950s, but both films were gorgeous portraits of aching longing and rapturous passion among the wealthy and artistic. These were lush dramas that scratched an old-movie itch while taking a very contemporary look at same-sex relationships.
Sony/The Weinstein Company
"Concussion" (2015) This unpredictable tale of a lesbian housewife shaking off the suburbs for sophisticated sex work had the erotic moxie of "Belle de Jour" and the knowing, arch qualities of "The Stepford Wives," but it also represented the arrival of an important new voice -- writer-director Stacie Passon, making one of the decade's most exciting debuts.
RADiUS-TWC
"The Handmaiden" (2016) Park Chan-wook transferred Sarah Waters' novel "Fingersmith" from Victorian England to Japanese-occupied Korea, but the psychological gamesmanship and breathless lesbian eroticism remained intact. Boasting gorgeous production values and a script where characters are constantly gaining and losing the upper hand, this was a riveting thriller that took queer relationships as a given, even in what we think of as the buttoned-down olden times.
Amazon Studios
"How to Survive a Plague" (2012) David France's incredibly vital piece of activist cinema documented the rise of ACT UP in New York City in the 1980s, and how the members of that group fought the system -- before, essentially, taking it over themselves -- as the U.S. government and pharmaceutical industry turned its back on people with HIV and AIDS. It's one of the great "yes, you can fight city hall" documentaries ever made.
IFC
"Moonlight" (2016) The subtle ways in which children come to understand -- and are taught to be afraid of -- their true selves, and the obstacles for adults seeking to overcome a lifetime of negative messaging are just some of the threads that weave their way through this gorgeous tapestry of a life, as portrayed brilliantly by three actors and captured by writer Tarell Alvin McCraney and director Barry Jenkins.
A24
"Pain and Glory" (2019) Legendary filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar offered some of his most tenderly romantic moments late in this autobiographical film, as director Salvador (Antonio Banderas) has an unexpected reunion, decades later, with his onetime lover. In just a few scenes, the two convey the depth and breadth of a relationship, from beginning to inevitable end, and it helps provide the full picture of Salvador, an artist whose past provides the possibility of unlocking his creative block.
Sony
"Take Me to the River" (2014) What starts out as a dark comedy about a gay California teenager forced to attend a family reunion in Nebraska unfurls into an unsettling thriller about family secrets and unresolved longings. Writer-director Matt Sobel subtly but inexorably tightens the vise, and it's not until the closing credits roll that you allow yourself to exhale fully again.
Netflix
"Tangerine" (2015) A Christmas Eve in the lives of two trans sex workers (played memorably by Mya Taylor and Kitana Kiki Rodriguez) provides a glimpse into both the grind of their day-to-day existence and their hopes and dreams. The leads consulted on the script, and the results are both quotidian and poetic.
Magnolia Pictures
"Weekend" (2011) Writer-director Andrew Haigh ("45 Years") starts with a simple premise -- two guys meet and hit it off, just as one of them is about to leave the country -- and turns it into a riveting two-hander, with Tom Cullen and Chris New capturing those moments of connection and curiosity and chemistry that mark the beginning of every new relationship, even as we know this one will end before it can even really start.
Sundance Selects
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Decade in Review: "Pain and Glory," "Carol" and "How to Survive a Plague" rank among the highlights of the decade
Whether a curse or a blessing, "May you live in interesting times" certainly applies to the LGBTQ community -- the past decade saw the legalization of same-sex marriages and the end of the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy, but every advancement has been met with pushback and threats to overturn equal protections under the law. Trans characters (played, for a change, by trans performers) got their largest public spotlight on television shows like "Pose" and "Transparent," while at the same time they remain the targets of violence and of hysterical and reactionary lawmakers. Whatever triumphs and travails the community faced in day-to-day life, their lives and loves continued to be reflected on the big screen; here are some of the decade's greatest examples, listed alphabetically.
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