LGBT cinema in Latin America

http://dbpedia.org/resource/LGBT_cinema_in_Latin_America an entity of type: Thing

Latin American nations have been producing national LGBT+ cinema since at least the 1980s, though homosexual characters have been appearing in their films since at least 1923.:75 The collection of LGBT-themed films from 2000 onwards has been dubbed New Maricón Cinema by Vinodh Venkatesh; the term both includes Latine culture and identity and does not exclude non-queer LGBT+ films like Azul y no tan rosa.:6-7 Latin American cinema is largely non-systemic, which is established as a reason for its wide variety of LGBT-themed films.:142 rdf:langString
rdf:langString LGBT cinema in Latin America
xsd:integer 39570187
xsd:integer 1124200307
rdf:langString right
rdf:langString Argentine actress Inés Efron;
rdf:langString Bottom: Chilean transgender actress
rdf:langString Daniela Vega has won seven Best Actress
rdf:langString Top: Argentine directors Lucrecia Martel
rdf:langString and Lucía Puenzo . Both have created
rdf:langString awards for her performance in LGBT+ films
rdf:langString multiple LGBT+ films, several starring
rdf:langString Latin American nations have been producing national LGBT+ cinema since at least the 1980s, though homosexual characters have been appearing in their films since at least 1923.:75 The collection of LGBT-themed films from 2000 onwards has been dubbed New Maricón Cinema by Vinodh Venkatesh; the term both includes Latine culture and identity and does not exclude non-queer LGBT+ films like Azul y no tan rosa.:6-7 Latin American cinema is largely non-systemic, which is established as a reason for its wide variety of LGBT-themed films.:142 A "boom" in LGBT+ cinema of the region began at the turn of the century and was reinvigorated in the 2010s, which also notably included output of such films from spaces in Latin America (e.g. Venezuela) with film industries that "have lagged behind" the rest of the region.:6-7, 19, 192 The bisexual-themed Mexican film Y tu mamá también (2001) was nominated for an Oscar, with the Chilean trans+ film A Fantastic Woman (2017) winning one. Azul y no tan rosa (2012) won the Goya Award for Best Spanish Language Foreign Film at the 28th Goya Awards, becoming the first Venezuelan film to do so.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 25271

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