Victor Iriarte

Filmes

Foremost by Night
Writer
A film noir with three deaths, two robberies and an escape. Two women in their fifties are set to meet on the banks of the Douro River. When Vera was young, she could not take care of her son and had to give him up for adoption. When Cora was young, her doctor told her that she could not have children and that only by adopting could she form a family. Both share the experience of having been mothers of a boy named Egoz. Now, our two protagonists meet again in Portugal to review the story of their lives and rewrite their destinies.
Foremost by Night
Director
A film noir with three deaths, two robberies and an escape. Two women in their fifties are set to meet on the banks of the Douro River. When Vera was young, she could not take care of her son and had to give him up for adoption. When Cora was young, her doctor told her that she could not have children and that only by adopting could she form a family. Both share the experience of having been mothers of a boy named Egoz. Now, our two protagonists meet again in Portugal to review the story of their lives and rewrite their destinies.
Invisible
Director
A vampire movie, an experiment. Victor Iriarte instead of filming a movie tells a movie with intertitles and a black screen, while artist Mursego writes music for the film we never see.
Good Night, Spain
Editor
In another lifetime, a Spanish couple takes drugs and teleports through their television set. A troubled young man travels through the countryside and meets a lost woman. During the trip, they discover a museum housing the expatriated paintings of the most important Filipino artist of the revolution. Eventually, the Spanish couple disappears toward their colony. Inspired by one of the earliest teleportation accounts, which happened between the Philippines and Mexico during the colonial period.
Good Night, Spain
Cinematography
In another lifetime, a Spanish couple takes drugs and teleports through their television set. A troubled young man travels through the countryside and meets a lost woman. During the trip, they discover a museum housing the expatriated paintings of the most important Filipino artist of the revolution. Eventually, the Spanish couple disappears toward their colony. Inspired by one of the earliest teleportation accounts, which happened between the Philippines and Mexico during the colonial period.
Re-Writing
Director
Vera (49) works as a court reporter at the tribunals of Madrid. Her apparently orderly life hides a secret : when she was young, she gave birth to a child of whom she could not take care. Years later, when she tried to find him, she was told a lie, that his file did not exist anymore. She has continued looking for him ever since. While searching, Vera leads a double life : she takes on jobs in the underworld, working for crime organizations, as a way of fighting the system that betrayed her. Cora (52) is a piano teacher living in San Sebastián who dedicated her life to taking care of her adoptive son, Egoz (19). Egoz is about to leave home and start his own independent life, far away. Vera lost her son and spent all her life looking for him. Cora fears losing hers. Reescritura is an encounter between these two women during which they tell each other their life stories and imagine other possible destinies.