Argentine Cinema Shines at Venice Amidst Budget Cuts and Uncertainty
From left : Australian actress Cate Blanchett, British actress Charlotte Rampling and Luxembourg actress Vicky Krieps attends the red carpet for the movie "Father Mother Sister Brother" presented in competition at the 82nd International Venice Film Festival, at Venice Lido on August 31, 2025. ©Tiziana FABI / AFP

Despite facing severe funding cuts and a near standstill in national film production, Argentina is making a notable appearance at the Venice Film Festival with five films on show. However, most of these are foreign co-productions, highlighting the ongoing challenges for local filmmakers under President Milei's austerity measures.

Although Argentina has been underrepresented at recent international festivals due to government cuts to the sector, five Argentine films are on show at the Venice Film Festival, including Lucrecia Martel's documentary Nuestra Tierra (Our Land).
Since President Javier Milei came to power in December 2023, his austerity measures have had a major impact on the industry, particularly on the National Institute of Cinema and Audiovisual Arts (INCAA), the public body responsible for promoting and supporting film production.
The cuts have brought the sector to a standstill, leaving production companies with less room for manoeuvre.
Previously, production was supported by a series of subsidies, sometimes in the form of advances, but "now you have to come up with your own private financing," said Vanesa Pagani, president of the Association of Independent Audiovisual Media Producers (APIMA).
Only when you meet all the requirements, "are you entitled to the subsidy," she told AFP.
According to Pagani, since the INCAA has been under new management following Milei's election, "no film has obtained the funding to be made."
"No one knows where the funds held by the INCAA are going, because it does have funds, as it collects a percentage of cinema ticket sales, as well as other fees, but that money is not being invested in national production," said Javier Campo, a researcher specializing in documentary filmmaking.

At the Cannes Film Festival earlier this year, where Argentina has traditionally enjoyed a prominent presence, it had only the short film Tres (Three) by Juan Ignacio Ceballos and Drunken Noodles, a feature film by Lucio Castro.
The effects of Milei's funding cuts were also felt at the latest edition of the Berlin International Film Festival, where the only Argentine film presented was Iván Fund's El mensaje (The Message), which won the jury prize.
But at Venice, in addition to Martel's out-of-competition documentary, Argentina will be represented by Daniel Hendler's Un Cabo Suelto (A Loose End), co-produced with Uruguay and Spain; Alejo Moguillanski's Pin de Fartie; Gastón Solnicki's The Souffleur, co-produced with Austria; and El Origen del Mundo (The Origin of the World), a short film by Jazmín López.
However, interpreting the five films as a "recovery" for Argentine cinema would be mistaken, said Campo, as they are "co-productions with largely external financing."
"It would be difficult to say that they are entirely Argentine films," he said.
Hernán Findling, president of the Argentine Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, called it a "kind of perfect storm" that has brought production to a near-standstill.
Between a "government that does not defend culture" and the dramatic macroeconomic changes seen in Argentina, "the costs are high" for the film industry, he said.
"Film production is going to drop considerably in the short-to-medium term," Findling added.

Although streaming platforms and large production companies are helping keep filming afloat, small productions are being left out as they cannot finance their productions upfront.
"There is a part of cinema that is being lost, a part of cinema that has a long history at festivals, a high profile that goes beyond how many tickets are sold or not," said Pagani.
Although the platforms' contributions are valuable, Findling said, "it can't be the only thing Argentina produces."
Moreover, the streaming platforms tend to support established directors, actors, and screenwriters, with fewer opportunities for newcomers.
For his part, Nicolás Vetromile, editor and delegate of the ATE union at INCAA, warned of the risk of an "Uberisation of cinema", with less stringent labour laws governing the streaming platforms.
"Today, all these issues are left to the discretion of the employer," he said.

By José Vicente BERNABEU

Comments
  • No comment yet