Cecilia Araneda Trailers
Western Brook Pond TrailerHypnagogia Trailerlessons on flight Trailer
Winnipeg-based Chilean Canadian filmmaker Cecilia Araneda has completed 17 short films to-date, that have screened at film festivals, artist run centres and art museums around the world, and which have been recognized with various national and international awards and distinctions. Among the festivals and venues that have presented her work include Visions du Reél, Ann Arbor, Images, RIDM, Documenta Madrid, Festival du Nouveau Cinéma, TIFF Bell Lightbox, Film Anthology Archives and Maysles Documentary Center.
Most Popular Cecilia Araneda Trailers
Total trailers found: 9
04 October 2022
Chilean refugee Daniela came to Canada as a child after her mother was assassinated during Chile’s dictatorship.
16 October 2021
Shot at Bate Island in Ottawa, "landing" is made from hand-processed B&W 16mm film hand-coloured with organic and photochemical tones, video and found sound.
03 April 2020
"Unarchive" juxtaposes the filmmaker's father's life with the political history of Chile – his birthplace – over the past century.
18 April 2023
"souvenir" is made from hand-processed B&W 16 mm film hand-coloured with photochemical toners, and incorporates found sound.
01 January 2009
What Comes Between is an examination of personal memory and loss rooted in the filmmaker’s birth place – Chile – and her departure from that country long ago.
25 January 2024
Shot on black and white 16 mm film, organically processed with olives, and hand-coloured in a rural area of Chile, lessons on flight examines the flight patterns of the green-backed firecrown hummingbird.
23 April 2024
In the space between sleep and wake, hallucinations and moments of paralysis take hold. Hypnagogia is an exercise in eco-processing, with the film footage processed with multiple different organic material, including apples, avocado peel, coffee, grapes, peaches, pomegranate and wine.
16 April 2026
A boat trip through Western Brook Pond, an ancient fjord in the Long Range Mountains in Newfoundland, carved out over millions of years by tectonic activity and glaciers.