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  1. The Hour of the Furnaces (Spanish: La hora de los hornos) is a 1968 Argentine film directed by Octavio Getino and Fernando Solanas. 'The paradigm of revolutionary activist cinema', [1] it addresses the politics of the 'Third worldist' films and Latin-American manifesto of the late 1960s.

  2. Nov 1, 1973 · The Hour of the Furnaces: Directed by Octavio Getino, Fernando E. Solanas. With María de la Paz, Fernando E. Solanas, Edgardo Suárez, Julio Troxler.

    • (1.2K)
    • Documentary, History, War
    • Octavio Getino, Fernando E. Solanas
    • 1973-11-01
  3. Mar 8, 2012 · As Sight & Sound counts down to 2012’s once-a-decade poll to find the Greatest Film of All Time, French critic Nicole Brenez makes the case for one of the key revolutionary activist films of the 1960s, The Hour of the Furnaces.

  4. Film in three segments: 1. Neocolonialism; 2. Act for liberation; 3. Violence and liberation. A documentary about the revolutionary movement in Argentina from 1819 to the present day.

  5. Sight and Sound. The Greatest Films of All Time. The Hour of the Furnaces. 1968 Argentina. Directed by. Fernando Solanas. Produced by. Edgardo Pallero. Ranked in The Greatest Films of All Time poll.

  6. The Hour of the Furnaces is a 1968 Argentine film directed by Octavio Getino and Fernando Solanas. 'The paradigm of revolutionary activist cinema', it addresses the politics of the 'Third worldist' films and Latin-American manifesto of the late 1960s.

  7. Directed by Fernando Ezequiel "Pino" Solanas and Octavio Getino, The Hour of the Furnaces is a three-part, four-hour and twenty-minute political documentary that delivers an analysis of foreign imperialism and the major social sciences and day-to-day life in Latin America.