Ezequiel Yoffe
Editing
Known For

A farm laborer crosses the mythical nature of the Iberá Wetlands in search of a child he lost in an accident. To find them, he has to embody a hero called "Gauchito Gil", a local Robin Hood, and therefore die like the myth: hanged from his ankles.
A Sacred Gaucho

The irrepressible Ratones Paranoicos, Argentina's most enduring rock band, are featured in vintage concert and backstage footage as their story's told.
Ratones Paranoicos: The Band That Rocked Argentina

No description available.
Bohemia

No description available.
El rey del rocanrol

A documentary about cumbia from Argentina, from early years to recent years.
Cumbia la reina

The annual short film competition for directors organized and produced by INCAA presents seven new works.
Historias breves 15

A man arrives with the obsession to recover his wife in the arid landscape of the Andes range. A pasional drama filled with violence is triggered when he discovers that she no longer expects him.
La sombra quema

Emigrated to San Pablo, Martín Mirol decides to put together a typical tango orchestra in a city where the environment lives another culture. After ten years playing with De Puro Guapos, the typical orchestra that he forms in Brazil, he is facing a journey to the roots of the genre, a search for what popular music means that became a heritage of humanity.
A puro gesto, un ritual de tango

Kamatsu is an 80 year old Japanese man who came to Buenos Aires more than five decades ago because he heard that there was a hen that lay green eggs. In a game of expectation and reality, this documentary continually stumbles over its own preconceptions. The initial idea of understanding the migration, identity and tradition of a Japanese migrant derives in the story of some eggs, some notebooks and the authors' search for vision and meaning.
La Odisea de Kamatsu

With the Marine Dance as its banner, Así Baila mi Perú is a Dance Docu that portrays how migrants maintain cultural ties away from their homeland.
Así baila mí Perú

In the summer of 2015 more than 50,000 acres of Andean Patagonian forests were devastated by fires. Although the lack of rain was decisive, local residents insist that the human intervention was behind these fires.