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Culture · Film
Key Facts
—The stage: The 25th Tribeca Festival, the New York event co-founded by Robert De Niro after the September 11 attacks, runs June 3-14 with a notable Latin American cohort.
—The headliner: “Summer War,” a Chile-Argentina-Uruguay co-production by Alicia Scherson adapting a Roberto Bolaño novel, has its world premiere in the International Narrative Competition.
—The Brazilian entry: Aly Muritiba’s “Funk,” a musical drama set in the world of Brazilian funk, stars Duda Santos alongside real-life artists Lellê and MC Nem.
—The spread: Films from Chile, Brazil, Mexico and Puerto Rico screen across the festival’s competitive and documentary sections.
—The stakes: A major New York platform offers regional filmmakers rare exposure to US distributors, critics and international buyers.
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Latin American cinema is having a moment on one of the world’s most visible festival stages, with a Bolaño adaptation and a Brazilian funk drama among the standouts in New York this month.
Latin American films converge on Tribeca
The Tribeca Festival, marking its 25th edition from June 3 to 14 in New York City, has programmed a cluster of Latin American films across its competitive, documentary and Viewpoints sections. Founded in 2002 by Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal and Craig Hatkoff to help revive Lower Manhattan after the September 11 attacks, the festival has grown into one of the largest in the United States, drawing roughly 150,000 attendees and offering filmmakers a direct line to American distributors, critics and international buyers. For directors from the region, a slot in the New York lineup is a rare and valuable window onto the global market.
This year’s regional selection spans Chile, Brazil, Mexico and Puerto Rico, a reminder that Latin American filmmaking continues to find international footholds even as major festivals devote relatively few slots to the region. The breadth of countries and genres on show — psychological thriller, musical drama, social realism — reflects a film culture that is increasingly confident in pitching itself to audiences far beyond its home markets.
A Bolaño adaptation leads the charge
The most prominent title is “Summer War” (Guerra de Verano), a co-production of Chile, Argentina, Uruguay and Italy directed by the acclaimed Chilean filmmaker Alicia Scherson, having its world premiere in the International Narrative Competition. The film adapts “The Third Reich,” a novel by Roberto Bolaño — widely regarded as one of the most influential Latin American writers of the late 20th century — and marks Scherson’s second time bringing his work to the screen. Set in 1989, against the waning days of the Pinochet dictatorship, it follows a tabletop wargame champion whose seaside holiday curdles into a psychological thriller after a fellow tourist vanishes. The international cast includes Lux Pascal and Aline Kuppenheim, and the premiere is a homecoming of sorts for Scherson, who won Tribeca’s Best New Narrative Director award for her 2005 debut.
The choice of source material gives the film a literary weight that travels well: Bolaño’s posthumous international stature means his name alone signals ambition to festival audiences, and Scherson’s track record with his prose lends the adaptation credibility before a frame is seen.
Brazil brings funk to the screen
Brazil’s entry is “Funk,” directed by Aly Muritiba, an electrifying musical drama that follows a young woman’s rise within the vibrant world of Brazilian funk. It pairs actress Duda Santos with real-life musicians Lellê and MC Nem, grounding the fiction in the genre’s living scene. Funk’s journey from the working-class periphery of Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo to global streaming playlists makes it one of Brazil’s most potent cultural exports, and a film built around it carries that story to an international audience primed by the genre’s online reach. Rounding out the wider regional presence are titles from Mexico and Puerto Rico, alongside the Haitian premiere “The Tropic Sun and His Eyes.”
For foreign readers tracking Latin America beyond markets and politics, the Tribeca lineup is a useful snapshot of where the region’s storytelling is heading: rooted in local histories — dictatorship, music, migration — but pitched with an eye on the world. Whether these films secure the distribution deals that turn festival buzz into theatrical and streaming releases is the test that follows the premieres.
Frequently Asked Questions
When is the Tribeca Festival 2026?
It runs June 3-14, 2026, in New York City, marking the festival’s 25th edition since its founding in 2002.
Which is the standout Latin American film?
“Summer War” by Chile’s Alicia Scherson, a world-premiere adaptation of Roberto Bolaño’s novel “The Third Reich,” set in 1989 Chile, screening in the International Narrative Competition.
What is the Brazilian entry?
“Funk,” directed by Aly Muritiba, a musical drama about a young woman’s rise in Brazilian funk, starring Duda Santos with musicians Lellê and MC Nem.
Why does Tribeca matter for the region?
A major New York stage gives Latin American filmmakers rare access to US distributors, critics and global buyers who can turn festival exposure into wider release.
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