Marina de Tavira to Star in the Psychological Thriller “House Eight”

Marina de Tavira has entered the house

The 50-year-old Mexican Oscar-nominated actress will star in Brenda Navarro’s House Eight (“Casa 8”), one of the hottest projects at the Bogotá Audiovisual Market (BAM).

Meanwhile, Verónica Bravo, nominated for a 2023 best actress Canacine Prize for Sobreviviendo Mis XV, is also attached to take a key cast role in the series.

Currently in development and reaching out for international production partners, House Eigh” is set up at high-flying Mexican production outfit Mandarina Cine, this year a global SXSW Audience Award winner for Corina, now nominated for eight Mexican Academy Ariel Awards 

Mandarina also produced The Devil Smokes (and Saves the Burnt Matches in the Same Box), the first best film winner at the inaugural Berlinale Perspectives section, reserved for first-time movies.

The Devil Smokes was described by Variety as “a childhood survival story as strange and beguiling as its title.

Likewise, House Eight weighs in as one of the most distinctive offerings at BAM. A psychological thriller, with fantasy or even metaphysical elements, it follows a group of terminally ill women who shelter in a clandestine house to die with dignity.

They come to be faced by a disturbing reality: The Witch, their spiritual and scientific leader, has developed an experimental method that revives the dead, according to the synopsis.

When one of the dead unexpectedly revives, the community fractures, and the Witches assistant becomes their greatest enemy, unleashing an ethical and emotional struggle were accepting death or defying it will change their lives forever.

“Brenda Navarro is an indispensable voice in our literature, creator of heart-rending worlds which are personally and socially touching. I would be delighted to collaborate in this project,” said de Tavira.

“I’m utterly moved by the possibility of being part of a group of women who tell a courageous, risky, painful and honest story, all guided by one of the most exciting young voices in our country’s current literature, Brenda Navarro. “May the story be told!” added Verónica Bravo.

“As a narrator, Brenda Navarro has the sensibility and social conscience to allow her to write from pain, not to reproduce but dismantle it. Her arrival on the film and TV scene, with images as potent as her writing, is a natural step. At Mandarina we are honoured and happy to make this journey with her,” said Carlos Hernández Vázquez, co-founder of Mandarina Cine with Gabriel Gavica in 2018.

Navarro added that she and Hernández are looking for international alliances to produce House Eight, “a story about women with a team made up primarily of women in which the main theme is the fear to live when faced by such an unjust world, full of women which are battling to exercise a control over their decisions. ‘House Eight’ is a horror drama where the desire to die with dignity is punished by eternal life.”

House Eight won first prize in the 2024 Episode 0 section at Mexico’s Guadalajara Film Festival.

Fonzi to Star in Horror Film “El diablo blanco”

Dolores Fonzi has landed a devilish role…

The 37-year-old Argentine actress is set to star in the horror film El diablo blanco, converting the project into one of the highest-profile genre offerings coming down the pike in Latin America.

Dolores Fonzi

Fonzi joins an Argentine A-list cast that includes Esteban Lamothe and Julieta Zylberberg.

Juan Pablo Gugliotta, co-founder of Buenos Aires’ Magma Cine, a pioneer in pan-Latin American co-production and auteur genre movies, will introduce the horror movie to potential co-production partners and sales agents at next week’s Bogota Audiovisual Market (BAM).

The screenplay allows the involvement of one or two actors from outside Argentina, Gugliotta said.

The feature debut of Ignacio Rogers, a theater actor-turned-filmmaker who is writing the screenplay, El diablo blanco kicks off with three male friends going off camping in the mountains. They meet three girls and immediately hit it off. Romance flowers as they decide to continue the trip together. One of them, Fernando, has a strange encounter with a mysterious man and suffers premonitory dreams of this man killing people, after which a once-carefree holiday trip turns into a ghastly nightmare.

El diablo blanco has its origins in classic American horror, but at least two factors set it apart, said Gugliotta. One is the presence of “deep Latin American roots, Argentine indigenous myths and legends.”

El diablo blanco’s friends are also not teens but adults in their mid-to-late-thirties, one a divorcee, another about to inherit local land, and two of the women qualified anthropologists, searching for traces of the mountains’ original indigenous settlers.

About 60% of “The White Devil’s” budget is covered between Magma Cine’s own financing and subsidy from Argentina’s Incaa film board, Gugliotta said.

Fonzi, Lamothe and Zylberberg have all broken through to international recognition this decade. Fonzi toplined Santiago Mitre’s Paulina, which won the Cannes Critics’ Week Grand Prize last year; Lamothe was the star of Mitre’s debut, The Student. Zylberberg co-starred in Anna Katz’s My Friend From the Park, a Sundance Film Festival 2016 best screenplay winner.

El diablo blanco is scheduled to shoot in the first quarter of 2017, during Argentina’s summer.