Lo Invisible
Description
In her opulent home in the Ecuadorian countryside, Luisa (Anahi Hoeneisen) sinks further and further into a forlorn state brought on by a bout with postpartum depression. Luisa strives to return to her notion of normalcy, taking long solitary jogs and socializing at luxurious dinner parties over a glass of wine. But dysphoric tendencies begin to take hold and create a fissure between herself and the life she once knew. In Lo Invisible, director Javier Andrade captures Hoeneisen’s magnetic performance as Luisa, articulating the new mother’s turbulent dissolution with a striking degree of restraint, while allowing a keen focus on nonverbal dialogue and quietly composed moments to speak volumes on the complexity of a frequently misunderstood and unseen crisis.
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Biographies
A native of Portoviejo, Ecuador, Javier Andrade began as an actor before switching his focus to filmmaking and pursuing an MFA in directing at Columbia University’s School of the Arts. Among his films are Canción de Toquilla (2010), a short documentary about artisans of Pile, Ecuador, makers of Panama hats; La Casa del Ritmo: A Film About Los Amigos Invisible (2012), a feature documentary about the Venezuelan funk band; The Porcelain Horse (2012), his narrative feature debut; and 52 Seconds (2017), a personal documentary taking the measure of the devastation in his hometown in the wake of a 7.8 magnitude earthquake. Lo Invisible (2021) is his second narrative feature.