CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Lencho of the Apes
Posts: 1835
Joined: Tue Dec 11, 2018 4:38 am

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by Lencho of the Apes »

some experimental/subversive films were made under the official banner of "army film".
Conversely, in Argentina, 1956-57, right after A) the coup that ousted Peron and B) the foundation of the national movie-financing government bankroll insurance grant loans organization INCAA, one of the first projects INCAA underwrote was a short travelogue about a vacation/settlement village that had been designed and built for the comfort of expat nazis, "your little piece of heimat in the shadow of the Andes" as it were. Not a real quote.

https://youtu.be/bZ9Xr-AOCNM?t=122
The opposite of 'reify' is... ?
Mario Gaborovic
Posts: 234
Joined: Fri Jan 04, 2019 8:54 am

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by Mario Gaborovic »

I strongly recommend Gigante, right up my alley (it has an unusual genre-twist midthrough), and maybe 25 Watts which is ok.
User avatar
niminy-piminy
Posts: 3010
Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
Location: Prague, Bohemia

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by niminy-piminy »

1/
SEVERINA (Felipe Hirsch, 2017) #CoMoUruguay
https://variety.com/2017/film/festivals ... 202518873/
Hirsch’s feel-good film about imagination and women world
in other words
Hirsch’s feel-good film with a "manic pixie dream girl" heroine
a meta-mujer
Brazil-Uruguay co-production with allusions to Argentine (J. L. Borges specifically)
I wanted to make a film placed out of the zeitgeist, a work that would not hark back to Latin America’s political tragedy.
“Severina” is set somewhere which could be anywhere in Spanish-speaking Latin America.
Severina was conceived and made: among Uruguayans, Argentines, Brazilians, Chileans, Peruvians, Guatemalans, and also the Portuguese.
2/
IN PRAGUE (Mario Handler, 1964) #CoMoUruguay
watched without subs (i.e. no clue what is being said about my dwelling place???)

https://youtu.be/SGtaL-6YA30
User avatar
nrh
Posts: 1659
Joined: Tue Dec 11, 2018 2:04 pm

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by nrh »

severina is a very good book and a terrible movie
Lencho of the Apes
Posts: 1835
Joined: Tue Dec 11, 2018 4:38 am

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by Lencho of the Apes »

A movie called Prague: The Beating Heart f Europe, presumably made i Argentina, is going to be added soon to Filmoteca nline's youtube channel; I'll get back to you on that.
The opposite of 'reify' is... ?
User avatar
niminy-piminy
Posts: 3010
Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
Location: Prague, Bohemia

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by niminy-piminy »

Lencho of the Apes wrote: Tue Jul 12, 2022 6:07 am I'll get back to you on that.
looking forward!
User avatar
niminy-piminy
Posts: 3010
Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
Location: Prague, Bohemia

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by niminy-piminy »

sally wrote: Mon Jul 11, 2022 11:56 am the uruguay tourist board...
During the 1960s, tension in Uruguay was growing more and more and several branches of art (theater and music, for example) were in tune with the prevailing harmony. However, as Martínez Carril explains in his text La historia no oficial del cine uruguayo (2002), fiction films remained indifferent to what was happening in the country. There was no cinema committed to social issues, not even a cinema that interpreted the tensions or mobilizations of the moment from a more implicit point of view. Martínez Carril titles this section thus: A cinema alien to the country or a country alien to cinema. And he points out how the generation of Ulive, Handler, Mario Jacob and Walter Tournier once again broke the rule by committing themselves to what was happening in the country (although, generally, from the point of view of documentary cinema).

Ulive, within this framework, generated Como el Uruguay no hay, a short documentary film of acid humor that seeks to "unmask" (or at least make fun of) the national[ist?] discourse by showing its flip side, precisely by using a phrase as common as the title and adding a question mark at the end, in the title sequence. Ulive parodied the tourist short films, one of the only species of films that managed to develop in Uruguay besides the informative and institutional ones.
unfortunately, "Ugo Ulive - Como el Uruguay no hay AKA There's No Place Like Uruguay (1960)" is without subs.
i started a subs pot on the currently ill-reputed conspirative cinephile website, so (all the kg moguls) feel free to contribute.

watching it (without having a clue what is being said) anyway...
THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE URUGUAY (Ugo Ulive, 1960) #CoMoUruguay
https://youtu.be/EJY_o1b5iOg
User avatar
niminy-piminy
Posts: 3010
Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
Location: Prague, Bohemia

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by niminy-piminy »

Mario Gaborovic wrote: Mon Jul 11, 2022 8:26 pm I strongly recommend
mario, i see you have seen (some hours ago) ELECTIONS (Mario Handler, Ugo Ulive, 1967) — any remarks?
User avatar
niminy-piminy
Posts: 3010
Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
Location: Prague, Bohemia

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by niminy-piminy »

WARNING!
(from "Warned")
EXPLICIT CONTENT!
(more suitable for the "Haphazard pursuits of Sirman Deville for all Shocking & Extreme")

ENOUGH! (Ugo Ulive, 1969) #CoMoUruguay
Enough by Ugo Ulive (1969) is a documentary that stands out in the little-known production of Venezuelan experimental cinema, together with the Super 8 films by Carlos Castillo, Diego Rísquez and Rolando Peña, among others, and the artisanal animation tapes of Jose Castillo.
It was one of the first films made by the Documentary Film Center of the Universidad de los Andes, founded in 1969 following the impulse of the New Latin American Cinema at the meetings of documentary filmmakers in Viña del Mar, Chile (1967), and Mérida, Venezuela (1968).
Basta draws attention to the recording of an autopsy that alternates in the film with parts shot in an asylum, and with shots of guerrillas, and other events in the streets and neighborhoods of Caracas. The date of production is earlier, and the use of black and white, and the sound also differentiate it from the experimental film The Act of Seeing with One's Own Eyes by Stan Brakhage (United States, 1971), but in both cases questions are raised formal or theoretical about cinema. In Brakhage's film it is about the ability to capture images of the destruction of lifeless bodies through an instrument, the camera, which is not subject to the psychosomatic reactions of rejection that can affect the direct vision of the human eye, while that in Ulive's film the shots of the autopsy are inscribed in an attempt to expand and take Antonin Artaud's proposal for the theater of cruelty into a film.

The images of the procedure carried out by the pathologists in Basta clearly express the French playwright's intention to shock the public, as does the use of strident electronic music. But to this, Ulive adds a reflection on the type of knowledge generated by forensic medicine, which is significant for the documentary filmmaker's work: “The body passes into the public domain in the case of the autopsy. It is not an operation to cure a human being, but merely the performance of a bureaucratic operation to find out what a person has died of.” It follows that the sadism of images is analogous there to judicial scientific investigation of pathologists, which destroys the body. The camera becomes a participant in that destruction by registering it.

In Basta, the camera also acts with this idea of ​​cruelty against living subjects. It occurs in the harassment of psychiatric patients. There, Ulive did not limit himself, as in the autopsy, to showing the performance of the institution's staff, but he undertook his own investigation of the sadistic. The cruelty is manifested, for example, in the shots in which the naked bodies of the inmates appear. The same is seen in a man's annoyance at being closely watched, because he quickly gets up from the bench he was sitting on and walks away from him. The camera follows him as he walks, trying to escape. He tries to hide behind a pillar to no avail, and then starts running, failing to stop the camera from following him. It is the documentary filmmaker who exerts violence on people by inquiring beyond the will of the “filmed object, which in this case is a warning about the power that the instrument with which he films the film can give the filmmaker, not the institution for which you work.
The electronic music and the banging of the doors are contrasted with the sound of nature in the shots of the guerrilla advance, but the message of the violence of life that fights against the inhuman and death is a mixture of the viscerality of Artaud with the voluntarism of Fidel Castro. It is summed up in the slogan, reproduced at the beginning: "This great humanity has said enough is enough and has started walking". He even adds a sequence in which an oil rig imitates the movement of the sexual act, alternated with shots of a couple in bed. More than a call to reflect on the difficult possibility of love in an alienated society, it is a vulgar representation of the penetration of foreign oil companies.
“At that time I believed in the armed struggle,” stressed Ulive, a Uruguayan playwright, theater director and actor based in Venezuela, who had made films in his country since 1959. The doubt could arise from the touch of irony that may be perceived today in the repetition of the recording of the phrase “we have to keep fighting” at the end of Basta
all the quotes above are auto-translations from ENOUGH OF UGO ULIVE: THE CRUEL ACT OF FILMING
https://desistfilm.com/basta-de-ugo-oli ... de-filmar/
Image

There is almost no dialogue! Only a quote from Che Gevara at the beginning:
"Porque esta gran humanidad ha dicho «basta» y ha echado a andar."
"For this great mass of humanity has said 'enough' and has begun to march."
...and, at the end, a voice repeating "hay que seguir peleando." "We have to keep fighting."
https://youtu.be/6XvCWvhNu0M
Last edited by niminy-piminy on Wed Jul 20, 2022 11:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
sally
Posts: 3566
Joined: Tue Dec 11, 2018 8:11 pm

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by sally »

severina is a very good book and a terrible movie

i can't imagine the book is any less misogynist twaddle than the movie. maybe she left you for nothing to do with you, fuckface! jesus.

Image
User avatar
niminy-piminy
Posts: 3010
Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
Location: Prague, Bohemia

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by niminy-piminy »

Image

THE HOUSE IN MONTEVIDEO (Curt Goetz, Valerie von Martens, 1951) #CoMoUruguay
The firmly rooted ethics of a very proper school "professor" are awfully tempted when his sister, the "black sheep" of the family, sends from her exile in Montevideo an offer for the oldest daughter, which is utterly immoral, thoroughly despicable, yet hard to refuse.
Image
Image

Image
Image
Lencho of the Apes
Posts: 1835
Joined: Tue Dec 11, 2018 4:38 am

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by Lencho of the Apes »

Lencho of the Apes wrote: Tue Jul 12, 2022 6:07 am Prague: The Beating Heart f Europe


It's actually a Czech film, dubbed in Spanish, and by a noted director? Though I didn't catch his name. Orig. title: Neklidne Srdce Evropy. Here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FaMNxCOO258
The opposite of 'reify' is... ?
User avatar
sally
Posts: 3566
Joined: Tue Dec 11, 2018 8:11 pm

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by sally »

the creator of universes (mercedes dominioni, 2017) #CoMoUruguay

A sixteen year old with Asperger’s creates telenovelas at home with his 97-year old grandmother.


Image
Lencho of the Apes
Posts: 1835
Joined: Tue Dec 11, 2018 4:38 am

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by Lencho of the Apes »

Carlos, cine-retrato... Montevideo was a ffine piece of film.. Thanks, Jiri!
The opposite of 'reify' is... ?
User avatar
niminy-piminy
Posts: 3010
Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
Location: Prague, Bohemia

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by niminy-piminy »

re: Carlos
yw!

re: neklidné srdce evropy
Lencho of the Apes wrote: Thu Jul 14, 2022 4:44 am by a noted director?
https://letterboxd.com/film/prague-the- ... of-europe/
Image
User avatar
niminy-piminy
Posts: 3010
Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
Location: Prague, Bohemia

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by niminy-piminy »

BEATRIZ TADEO FUICA
URUGUAYAN CINEMA, 1960–2010
TEXT, MATERIALITY, ARCHIVE
(first published 2017, Tamesis, Woodbridge) #CoMoUruguay

the book is an overview of 50 yrs, divided into four parts.
each part contains a description of the political situation, the situation in film in general, and an elaboration on 3 specific movies.

(1960–1973)
1/ La ciudad en la playa AKA The City on the Beach (Ferruccio Musitelli, Sheila Henderson, Juan Noli, 1961)
2/ Carlos: cineretrato de un caminante en Montevideo AKA Carlos: Film-portrait of a Homeless Walker in Montevideo (Mario Handler, 1965)
3/ Refusila (GEC, 1969)

(1973–1985, dictatorship)
1/ El honguito feliz AKA The Happy Mushroom (CINECO, 1976)
2/ Gurí (Eduardo Darino, 1980)
3/ Mataron a Venancio Flores AKA Venancio Flores was Killed (Juan Carlos Rodríguez Castro, 1982)

(1985–2000)
1/ El cordón de la vereda AKA The Kerb (Esteban Schroeder, 1987)
2/ El dirigible AKA The Airship (Pablo Dotta, 1994)
3/ Una forma de bailar AKA A Way of Dancing (Álvaro Buela, 1997),

(2000–2010)
1/ 25 Watts (Pablo Stoll and Juan Pablo Rebella, 2001)
2/ Hit! Historia de canciones que hicieron historia AKA Hit! History of Songs which Made History (Claudia Abend and Adriana Loeff, 2008)
3/ Reus (Pablo Fernández, Alejandro Pi and Eduardo Piñeiro, 2010)

about the "National Office for Tourism", the book says the following...
In 1960, with the objective of promoting Uruguay as a tourist destination, the National Office for Tourism organised a script contest that followed a similar initiative conducted in 1949
The resulting films, which lasted about twenty minutes each, were shot on colour 35mm film stock. Half of them were made in 1961: La ciudad, Punta Ballena (Carlos Bayares), El niño de los lentes verdes (The Child with the Green Glasses; Eugenio Hintz and Alberto Mántaras Rogé), while the other three were produced during 1962: La raya amarilla (The Yellow Line; Carlos Maggi), Punta del este: ciudad sin horas (Punta del Este: Timeless City; Juan José Gascue) and El balneario (The Seaside Resort; Ferruccio Musitelli). All of these films usually show activities or stories by the beach, one of Uruguay’s tourist assets. The directors of these films were all associated with the art world, cine clubs or other filmmaking institutions.
The fact that all these directors were intellectuals and lovers of cinema, who would take advantage of any opportunity to make a film, resonates with the filmmaking practices of the so-called ‘early’ or ‘first’ film avant-garde of the United States.
The difficulty in classifying these films – either as official advertising or independent productions made by cinephiles and intellectuals – is clearly seen in La ciudad.
Analysing the intertextuality triggered by La ciudad, with reference to other avantgarde films, allows us to see its oppositional cinematic discourse, even though it was a film funded by the state to promote tourism.
In 1968, José Carlos Álvarez referred to the initiative of the Office for Tourism as ‘el tiempo de las sombrillas de playa [the time of the beach
umbrellas]’. Álvarez created this label to establish a contrast between these films and Ugo Ulive’s Como el Uruguay no hay (There Is No Place Like
Uruguay), also made in 1960.
besides the "National Office for Tourism", there was one more institution mildly exploited for "different" pursuits...
ICUR was one of the key institutions stimulating the making of educational films.
On 13 December 1950, the University Board approved the project of creating a film institute, submitted by Dr Rodolfo Tálice. According to Talice’s project, the aim was ‘fomentar – por todos los medios posibles – el empleo amplio, regular y adecuado del cine científico, cultural y documentario, y su producción nacional, coordinando los esfuerzos que tiendan a esos fines [to promote – by all means possible – the regular, appropriate and extensive use of scientific, cultural and documentary cinema and its national production, by coordinating the efforts towards the fulfilment of these aims]’. This detailed project explained the importance of cinema both for research and teaching, and also gave examples of the existence of other university film institutes in the world, such as that of the University of Utrecht (The Netherlands). Indeed, Tálice’s idea was inspired by a trip he made to Europe in 1949.
This institute was also ahead of its time in the region. In Santa Fe, Argentina, the Instituto Cinematográfico de la Universidad Nacional del
Litoral (Film Institute of the National University of the Littoral) was created in 1956. ... In Chile, the Cineteca de la Universidad de Chile (Chile’s University Cinematheque) was created five years later, in 1961.
between 1955 and 1965, ICUR obtained more professional results, for which Plácido Añón’s knowledge of cinematography was very
important. The quality of his work was recognised at SODRE’s Film Festival. In 1960, the scientific documentary El comportamiento sexual y reproductivo de Bothriurus Bonariensis (Sexual and Reproduction Behaviour of the Bothriurus Bonariensis) made by Añón and Lucrecia Covello de Zolessi, was awarded first prize in the category Scientific Documentary. Añón died in 1961, and the following year Mario Handler joined the institute.
Soon after Handler joined ICUR, Tálice requested permission from the Chancellor of the university to send Handler to Germany, more precisely to the Institute for Scientific Film (IWF) in Göttingen, as part of a training exchange developed by Tálice himself. In addition to visiting this institute, he would have the opportunity to visit the scientific cinema laboratories of the University Film Institute of Utrecht, the Scientific Film Institute of Paris and – if possible – Czechoslovakia, too. To accomplish this, Handler was to receive three months’ leave and funds from the budget of ICUR to cover travel and living expenses. This initial three-month training trip lasted until the end of 1964. In addition to spending some time in each of the aforementioned places, Handler also attended courses at the Film School in Prague (FAMU), where he made his first film En Praga (In Prague, 1964). The fact that Handler was trained in Europe is not a minor detail given that at that time he was, if not the only, at least one of the very few trained filmmakers in Uruguay. The resulting films would inevitably be the product of the tensions between the local conditions and that knowledge fully inspired by the European New Waves, especially the Czech New Wave.
On his return, instead of making scientific films, Handler started making social documentaries. ... Handler’s social documentaries, in which he neither followed the instruction of ICUR nor achieved its objectives, generated great tension inside the institute.
The first social documentary produced by ICUR and directed by Handler was the medium-length Carlos, about a homeless man in Montevideo. ... When Tálice watched the documentary, he rejected it because he considered that Handler had not done what he should have done. For this film Tálice had offered Handler some books about the clochard in Paris, an action which indicates that he probably expected a romanticised or idealised portrayal of the homeless, similar to that of the Parisian clochard in post-war French literature. However, Handler did not take this information into account and started from scratch his own research into the plight of homeless people in Montevideo. This anecdote about Tálice’s reaction reflects the mismatch between the institutional principles, admiring Europe, and Handler’s own ideas, concerned with showing local misery.
Carlos and Elecciones generated problems in the institute because they both received too much money and none was in line with its aims. Elecciones generated even more problems than Carlos, mainly due to its distribution and exhibition in festivals both inside and outside Uruguay. Indeed, this film was the last straw. After a series of incidents, Tálice started an administrative investigation against Handler.
This institute was supposed to make scientific films, like European institutes did in the 1940s and 1950s, when Tálice visited them. However, the Uruguayan institute never had the budget of European institutes and the filmmakers working there considered that the little infrastructure available had to be used for something else. In a literal action, Handler took the camera from the microscope and used it to shoot what was happening outside the laboratory. While the director of the institute initially supported this action, the resulting film was not approved. Uruguay did not have the Parisian clochards but the Uruguayan ‘caminantes’ (countryside wanderers).
User avatar
niminy-piminy
Posts: 3010
Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
Location: Prague, Bohemia

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by niminy-piminy »

CHILDREN GAMES AND SONGS FROM URUGUAY (Mario Handler, Eugenio Hintz, 1966) #CoMoUruguay

https://youtu.be/y8MStXFcrfs
User avatar
niminy-piminy
Posts: 3010
Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
Location: Prague, Bohemia

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by niminy-piminy »

During the second half of the 1960s, the Unión de Trabajadores Azucareros de Artigas (UTAA) carried out a series of marches from the north of the country to Montevideo, demanding better living conditions for its workers. These mobilizations took place in a context of economic crisis in the country and growing political and social conflict. Filmmakers Mario Handler, Alberto Miller and Marcos Banchero recorded some of these mobilizations at the time, contributing to the visibility of this sector of society, whose conditions of exploitation had been unknown to the capital's gaze until then.
Cañeros AKA Sugar Cane Workers (Mario Handler, 1966) #CoMoUruguay
Cañeros, by Mario Handler, records the 1965 march and was made within the framework of the Instituto de Cinematografía de la Universidad de la República (ICUR).
https://youtu.be/qEfWjxpf-Hs

En marcha AKA Marching (Alberto Miller, 1966) #CoMoUruguay
https://youtu.be/8mBLxSOtH4w

Marcha de los Cañeros AKA March of the Sugar Cane Workers (Marcos Banchero, 1968) #CoMoUruguay
https://youtu.be/nh66dH-KmJw
User avatar
niminy-piminy
Posts: 3010
Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
Location: Prague, Bohemia

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by niminy-piminy »

TELL MARIO NOT TO COME BACK (Mario Handler, 2008) #CoMoUruguay
After a long exile in Venezuela, filmmaker Mario Handler returns to his country, Uruguay. There, the dictatorship is still present in the media, public opinion, and in the memory of people. The director feels he owes something to the comrades, those who could not leave the country.
Image
Image
Two laws were passed granting amnesty to both sides: Law 15,737 (March 1985) allowed the liberation of the remaining political prisoners and Law 15,848 (December 1986) ensured that the state would not judge the crimes committed by the military and the police.
However, many social actors, especially those related to human rights associations, resisted the latter. A commission was therefore organised to promote a referendum for the so-called Expiry Law to be annulled. Although the initiative was supported by a fair number of citizens, the result of the referendum held in April 1989 showed that 56 per cent of the Uruguayan voters considered that the law should be upheld.
In 2007, different social actors such as members of the National Confederation of Trade Unions (PIT-CNT), students and human rights associations came together to promote a constitutional reform to annul the Expiry Law. After complying with the legal requirements, the constitutional reform was to be approved or rejected through a plebiscite celebrated in conjunction with the 2009 national elections. At that time, the Expiry Law was upheld once more; however, it remained controversial.
Image
Image
Lencho of the Apes
Posts: 1835
Joined: Tue Dec 11, 2018 4:38 am

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by Lencho of the Apes »

Chico Ventana Tambien Quisiera Tener Un Submarino , Piberno 2020, was as excitingly non-realistic as Zama or Jauja... but the severe violence against animals will be a deal-breaker for some people.
The opposite of 'reify' is... ?
User avatar
niminy-piminy
Posts: 3010
Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
Location: Prague, Bohemia

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by niminy-piminy »

TUPAMAROS! (Jan Lindqvist, 1972) #CoMoUruguay

https://youtu.be/ByP172-h4rc

not a film about guerrilla gardening...
Image
In 1969 he (Sir Geoffrey Holt Seymour Jackson) became ambassador in Uruguay. He was kidnapped by Tupamaros guerrillas in 1970, enduring a captivity of nine months. Released in September 1971

Image
Image
He (Ulysses Pereira Reverbel) was kidnapped twice, in 1968 and 1971, by the NLM-Tupamaros. In 1968 he was released after four days of kidnapping, remaining deprived of his freedom for more than a year on the second occasion.

Image
The National Liberation Movement-Tupamaros (MLN-T) considered Acosta y Lara to be one of the ideologues of the right-wing paramilitary organization called "Comando Caza Tupamaros" or " Squadron of Death ." On April 14, 1972, Column 15 of the MLN-T carried out four operations against those they considered members of the squadrons, which culminated in the deaths of Acosta y Lara, as well as Deputy Commissioner Oscar Delega, agent Carlos Leites, and Corvette Captain, Ernesto Motto.
Dan Mitrione was kidnapped by the Tupamaros on July 31, 1970 demanding the release of 150 political prisoners. The Uruguayan government, with U.S. backing, refused and Mitrione was later found dead in a car, shot twice in the head.

In 1987, two years after being released from prison, the leader of the Tupamaros, Raúl Sendic, said in an interview that Mitrione had been selected for kidnapping because he had trained police in riot control, and as retaliation for the deaths of student protestors.

Former Uruguayan police officials and CIA operatives stated Mitrione had taught torture techniques to Uruguayan police in the cellar of his Montevideo home, including the use of electrical shocks delivered to his victims' mouths and genitals. His credo was "The precise pain, in the precise place, in the precise amount, for the desired effect." He also helped train foreign police agents in the United States in the context of the Cold War. In 1978, at the 11th International Youth Festival in Cuba, Manuel Hevia Cosculluela, a Cuban who claimed to have infiltrated the CIA as double agent from 1962 to 1970, stated that Mitrione ordered the abduction of homeless people, so that he could use them as 'guinea pigs' in his torture classes. He said that attempts would be made to keep each victim alive for multiple torture sessions, but that torture would eventually kill them, and that their mutilated bodies would be dumped in the streets. He claimed that Mitrione personally tortured four homeless people to death.
On the road, on the road,
On the road towards victory,
Only the Tupamaros will bring us glory.
From oppression and distress
To liberate the nation
We must get rid of
The President and administration.
On the road, on the road,
To where hell doth lie,
That’s where Pacheco guides us
While the people die.
A road, a road
Of reflection doth say:
A dream will never come to pass
If we from action turn away.
So therefore, comrades,
Rather fighting to the end,
And die for your nation,
Than suffer tribulation.
We want to see our land
Liberated and free
With the flag of the Tupamaros!
User avatar
sally
Posts: 3566
Joined: Tue Dec 11, 2018 8:11 pm

Re: CoMo No. 3: Uruguay (July, 2022)

Post by sally »

Post Reply