12/11/2025

Join us on our next seminar with Byron Davies, Bruno Varela and Marcela Cuevas

On November 26 3-6PM, join us at NOVA FCSH (Berna Campus, Room A206) for a presentation by three members of Salón de Cines Múltiples (SACIMU): Bruno Varela, Marcela Cuevas and our first resident Byron Davies. They will talk to us about "Nahual Cinema and The Living Idol (Albert Lewin and René Cardona, 1957)".

Abstract In Anáhuac (in the Western imaginary, “Mesoamerica”), a nahual is a non-human entity like an owl or a rabbit (or even a meteorological phenomenon) that spiritually accompanies or advises a human, and of which that human can be a manifestation. The concepts of nahual, nahualli, and nahualismo are intimately linked to questions of death via their conceptual and etymological connections to tonalli, the Nahuatl word for one of three conceptions of the soul, in this case the one most closely associated with shadows. As Roberto Martínez González says, “The nahualli is the nocturnal aspect of the beings that inhabit the world. It is the hidden face that is revealed once the underworld has invaded the earth during the darkness of the night.” Since 2023, the Oaxaca, Mexico-based film exhibition and programming collective Salón de Cines Múltiples (SACIMU) has organized an annual Muestra Nahual, mainly focused on “other cinemas” from Oaxaca, and which last year also included a presentation of the 1957 MGM horror film The Living Idol (directed by Albert Lewin and René Cardona). This presentation at NOVA -meant as preparation for a forthcoming video essay - will use that same film as a basis for examining the links between nahualismo, film theory, and death. Beyond nahual references in its plot (about a contemporary Mexican woman possessed by the spirit of a Mayan princess and transfixed by the figure of the jaguar), we will explore how the film itself constitutes a kind of nahual - an animal shadow - of Golden Age Mexican films, as well as, more generally, how the idea of a nahual cinema speaks to classical film theory, with the animal shadow serving as a potent figure for the internal connections between film and mortality.

Salón de Cines Múltiples (SACIMU) in Oaxaca, Mexico, is a working group that collaborates in
generating experimental practices in film through exhibition, management, and educational
activities.

Bruno Varela (Mexico) is a self-taught audiovisual artist, researcher, and film and video creator. His works, mainly set in the geographical and conceptual South, have been featured in museums and festivals such as the Guggenheim Museum (New York), Getty Research Institute (Los Angeles), the Carrillo Gil Museum of Art (Mexico City), the Oberhausen International Short Film Festival (Germany), the Ann Arbor Film Festival (USA), the Morelia International Film Festival, and FICUNAM. Varela has received awards such as the e-flux Award from the Oberhausen Festival (2015), the Rockefeller Foundation's Media Artist distinction (2006), and the award for best work at the Geografías Suaves Festival (2002), as well as awards from FICUNAM (2012, 2023) and the Experimental Video Biennial in Mexicali, B.C. (2007, 2012). In 2019, he was a member of the National System of Art Creators (SNCA). He is a member of the film exhibition and programming collective Salón de Cines Múltiples (SACIMU), based in Oaxaca (Mexico).

Marcela Cuevas (Mexico) is an intermedia artist and cultural manager. She has studied photography, psychology, stage design, and the anthropology of art. She works in the areas of production, programming, and pedagogical processes in experimental cinema, as well as in creative writing, therapeutic accompaniment through art, performance, stage design, and community video. Her work has been presented in various museums, cultural spaces, and festivals in Mexico and abroad, including Australia, the United States, Peru, Colombia, Argentina, Canada, Uruguay, Paraguay, Spain, Chile, Guatemala, and Bolivia. She is a member of the film exhibition and programming collective Salón de Cines Múltiples (SACIMU), based in Oaxaca, Mexico.

Byron Davies (U.S./Mexico) is a researcher in philosophy, film curator, and visual artist originally from the United States and a naturalized citizen of Mexico. From 2024 to 2026, he is a Marie Skłodowska-Curie fellow with the Aresmur research group on aesthetics and art theory at the University of Murcia in Spain, carrying out the research project “Materialism and Geographic Specificity in the Philosophy of Film.” From 2018 to 2020, he was a postdoctoral research fellow at the Institute of Philosophical Research at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), and just before that, he completed his doctorate in the Department of Philosophy at Harvard University. His writings on film and media have appeared in October, Screen, Millenium Film Journal, The Baffler, Desistfilm, Los Experimentos, and NECSUS_European Journal of Media Studies, in addition to co-authored pieces in La Furia Umana and Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies. He is a member of the film exhibition and programming collective Salón de Cines Múltiples (SACIMU), based in Oaxaca (Mexico).

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12/11/2025

Join us on our next seminar with Byron Davies, Bruno Varela and Marcela Cuevas

On November 26 3-6PM, join us at NOVA FCSH (Berna Campus, Room A206) for a presentation by three members of Salón de Cines Múltiples (SACIMU): Bruno Varela, Marcela Cuevas and our first resident Byron Davies. They will talk to us about “Nahual Cinema and The Living Idol (Albert Lewin and René Cardona, 1957)”. Abstract In […]
29/10/2025

The Film-Phil Lisbon Seminars: Christine Greiner

The next session of our Film-Phil Lisbon Seminars will be led by Christine Greiner (Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo), who will talk about the “Death-Image: modes of existence”. Abstract Based on Vinciane Despret’s studies on the philosopher Étienne Souriau and the urgency of establishing modes of existence for the dead (and for death), we […]
01/10/2025

CfP Death in the Eyes 2: Philosophical Perspectives on Film Genres and Death

NOVA University Lisbon, 28-29 May, 2026 Keynote Speakers: Michele Aaron (University of Warwick) and Jean-Baptiste Thoret (Universitéde Poitiers) Like philosophical categories, film genres function as ways of unifying the manifold of experience, determining under what conditions the particular can be subsumed under the universal. This effort of inclusion lies at the very root of Western […]
30/09/2025

Extended Deadline! CfP Special Issue on Swan Songs: Philosophical Reflections on Death, Time, and Memory in Testament Films

We are happy to announce the new home for the Special Issue “Swan Songs: Philosophical Reflections on Death, Time, and Memory in Testament Films”!  The editors have chosen to publish it in Arts, an international, peer-reviewed, open-access journal (also published online by MDPI) devoted to research on all facets of the visual and performing arts, […]
11/11/2025

Susana Viegas at the I Symposium Ǝ&E: Intersections Between Ethics and Aesthetics

Susana Viegas will present at the I Symposium Ǝ&E: Intersections Between Ethics and Aesthetics, held at the University of Málaga, 16 and 17 December, 2025. Her talk, titled “Animal Violence: Bazin, Film, and the Ethics of Death,” revisits André Bazin’s seminal essay “La Mort tous les après-midi” (1949) through the lens of Albert Serra’s “Tardes […]
16/10/2025

New book chapter by Susana Viegas on Androids, Mortality, and Death-Images

A new book chapter by FILM AND DEATH’s PI Susana Viegas is out now. Titled “On Androids, Mortality, and Death-Images: Blade Runner and Westworld”, this new chapter is published in SecondDeath: Experiences of Death Across Technologies, edited by Alger Sans Pinillos, Vicent Costa, and Jordi Vallverdú (Springer, 2025). What happens when cinema makes androids confront […]
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