Hermia & Helena

Matías Piñeiro
Part of

54th New York Film Festival

September 30 - 11, 2016

On an artist residency in New York, where she’s working on a Spanish translation of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Camila (Agustina Muñoz) finds herself within a constellation of constantly shifting relationships. The precise gestures and mercurial moods of Matias Piñeiro’s other work are in evidence here, along with an emotional depth that makes this his richest and most mature film.

DIRECTOR
Matías Piñeiro
YEAR
2016
COUNTRY
Argentina / USA
RUNTIME
87 minutes
LANGUAGE
English and Spanish with English subtitles
START DATE
May 26, 2017

Now Playing!

Shooting outside his native Argentina for the first time, New York–based Matias Piñeiro fashions a bittersweet comedy of coupling and uncoupling that doubles as a love letter to his adopted city. Working on a Spanish translation of A Midsummer Night’s Dream during an artist residency, Camila (Agustina Muñoz) finds herself within a constellation of shifting relationships (an old flame, a new one, a long-lost relative). Mingling actors from the director’s Buenos Aires repertory with stalwarts of New York’s independent film scene (Keith Poulson, Dustin Guy Defa, Dan Sallitt), Hermia & Helena offers the precise gestures, mercurial moods, and youthful energies of all Piñeiro’s cinema, with an emotional depth and directness that make this his most mature work yet.

Piñeiro’s quiet virtuosity, which binds the movie’s relentless energy
to intimate discoveries, 
is giddily thrilling.
Richard Brody, The New Yorker
Much of what’s enrapturing about this deceptive wisp of a film is contained in this gentle flourish.
Tim Grierson, Paste Magazine
The film is delightful in ways that are deeply if obscurely deliberate.
Vadim Rizov, Filmmaker Magazine
Hermia & Helena
Hermia & Helena
Hermia & Helena
Hermia & Helena
Hermia & Helena

Read More

Videos

On the latest episode of FLC Luminaries, our video series that spotlights talent at all levels of the filmmaking process who uplift the art and craft of cinema, Our Land (Nuestra Tierra) director Lucrecia Martel discusses her expansive and enlightening first feature documentary.

Post

This week we’re excited to present a conversation from the 63rd New York Film Festival with Romería director Carla Simón, moderated by NYFF Main Slate selection committee member Florence Almozini.

Announcements

The New York Asian Film Festival (NYAFF) and Film at Lincoln Center today unveil the second wave of programming for its landmark 25th edition, adding more than 40 films to an already wide-ranging lineup, with very special final titles still to come.