Ernesto Díaz Espinoza is a Chilean genre Director, Screenwriter and Editor. He is known as a pioneer of action cinema in his country.Ernesto study Audio Visual Communication in Film and Television in the Film School DuoUC. Ernesto took an intensive course in screen-writing in Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona, Spain. In 2006 Ernesto writes, directs and ed...
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Ernesto Díaz Espinoza is a Chilean genre Director, Screenwriter and Editor. He is known as a pioneer of action cinema in his country.Ernesto study Audio Visual Communication in Film and Television in the Film School DuoUC. Ernesto took an intensive course in screen-writing in Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona, Spain. In 2006 Ernesto writes, directs and edits his first feature and the first South American martial arts film, Kiltro (2006); which he received positive critical acclaim from Critics and Audiences.Mirageman (2007), his second feature received even greater critical acclaim from the press and it received numerous audiences' awards from various film festivals from around the world. Film Critic Harry Knowles from Ain't It Cool News said "It's probably one of my favorite superhero movies of all time".His third feature Mandrill (2009), which has been described as mixture of James Bond and 70's exploitation films, had its world premiere at the 2009 Fantastic Fest; where it won Best Actor (Marko Zaror) and Best Fantastic Feature.In 2012 Ernesto writes and directs Bring Me the Head of the Machine Gun Woman (2012), homage to Exploitation films and way to adapt those type of films into Latin culture. The same year he directed a segment in the horror anthology The ABCs of Death (2012).In 2014, at the Valdivia International Film Festival Ernesto premieres his new film Santiago Violenta (2014), a gangster comedy with the tagline "A tale of bullets and booze"; where it won the Audience Award for Best Chilean film. In the same year he premieres Redeemer (2014) at the Fantastic Fest Film Festival. Show less «
The Chilean ingredient is what makes "Bring Me the Head of the Machine Gun Woman" different. We stro...Show more »
The Chilean ingredient is what makes "Bring Me the Head of the Machine Gun Woman" different. We strongly believe that the only way to do something authentic, is giving it the taste of our land, as the Chilean wine (is exported because it is a flavor not found anywhere else in the world, only here). And genre films are exportable films; there are fans all around the world, looking for new points of view and reinterpretations of the genre. The "Chilean thing" is what makes this movie not just another exploitation movie, but makes it fresh and exotic. Show less «
Genre films are entertainment... pop culture. That's what we want, to make pop culture movies that r...Show more »
Genre films are entertainment... pop culture. That's what we want, to make pop culture movies that reflect a society, an idiosyncrasy, showing a country through entertainment. Show less «