

Esmeralda
With Esmeralda, Hernandez shifts to the romantic mythology, but this descriptive aspect is secondary in the filmmaker's work, whose purpose is the constitution, by interposed myths, of a baroque cinematographic language. From this point of view, he joins the approaches of other contemporary filmmakers like Bene or Schroeter. In Esmeralda, he introduces masks from his creation to work on the physical and not only the filmic material. But Hernandez adds to his series of aesthetic variations of "stock-shots" of war plans, desolations, genocides, which brutally fall within the visual framework of his film. The filmmaker thus points out the cracks that overflow the myth in its darkest areas: the historical and social reality that obsesses us, that terrorizes us every moment.
Monica Carpiaux

Gaël Badaud

Michel Nedjar
Recommendations

Amanita Pestilens

The Defiant Ones
Insane Fight Club

Chimes at Midnight

Design for Living

The Women

The United Monster Talent Agency

A Night in Casablanca
Pretty Bloody: The Women of Horror

Paisan

Simon of the Desert

The Country Bears

Happiness

Pretty Village, Pretty Flame

Luxo Jr.

The Barbarians

Late Spring

The Flavor of Green Tea Over Rice

The Landlord
