From 1948 to 1963, the town of Fortin Olmos, Santa Fé Province, northern Argentina, centered around the forestry company, La Florestal. Following its closure, a group of priests from the Foucauld Brotherhood who had settled in the area years before, decided to create a woodcutters' cooperative which helped its impoverished and erratic members to buy public owned lands with their work. Physicians, school teachers and agronomists, some of whom were leftwingers, later joined the initiative and became players in this very particular political and cultural experience characterized by several incidents and two dictatorships. Forty years on, filmmakers Jorge Goldenberg and Patricio Coll, who in 1966 had shot the documentary film "Hachero Nomás" in that area of the country, return to the scene to take stock of those days.
S: PATRICIO COLL, JORGE GOLDENBERG | Ca: SEGUNDO CERRATO, ALEJANDRO FERNÁNDEZ MOUJÁN, ALBERTO YACCELINI | SM: SOUND MIX | S: stereo | E: JORGE GOLDENBERG, PATRICIO COLL, DIEGO ARÉVALO ROSCONI | SE: LENA ESQUENAZI | P: MARCELO CÉSPEDES | EP: MARCELO CÉSPEDES | PC: MC PRODUCCIONES |
MARCELO CÉSPEDES
S: Script - A: Animation - C: Cinematographer - Ca: Camera - SM: Sound Mixer - S: Sound - E: Editing - M: Music - SE: Sound Editor - P: Producer - EP: Executive Producer - PC: Production Company
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