I suppose that it's safe to assume that this group is no longer in existence, having been absorbed into the fold?
The Last Christeros
Los últimos cristeros
Matias Meyer
At the end of the nineteen-thirties, a small band of men and their Christero coronel refuse to accept amnesty and instead continues their fight against religious persecution and their right to practice their faith. Matias Meyer’s The Last Christeros, tells the valiant story of these soldiers of Christ, the last men standing against the Mexican army, with diminishing food and provisions, as they continue their journey against an arid and forbidding landscape.
Programmer's Note
In 1926, the Mexican government began the strict enforcement of the anti-clerical laws dictated in the 1917 Mexican Constitution, and introduced an array of new measures against demonstrations of faith. This reli*gious persecution, aimed mostly at Roman Catholics, sparked the Cristero War, a con*flict waged mostly by peasants against the well-trained Mexican army. Although the Cristero War officially took place between 1926 and 1929, groups of men continued fighting for their right to worship freely for several years afterward. Matias Meyer’s third feature film, The Last Christeros, retells the story of these tenacious men, resolved to openly uphold their beliefs, even in the face of certain death.
It’s the end of the 1930s. A Cristero colonel and his small company of guerrillas con*tinue their resistance, marching across arid mountains with little shelter from the ele*ments. The men push forward with their mission, refusing to surrender even when they are offered government amnesty. Meyer provides glimpses into their inner fears and trepidations, conveyed in close-ups strikingly juxtaposed with long shots in which figures blend into the forbidding landscape. As the peasants’ supply of ammunition and provi*sions dwindles, their situation becomes more perilous and loneliness threatens their forti*tude. They break the nighttime silence with songs of longing, commitment and faith.
Meyer offers an alternative to the western genre, portraying the realities of the revolt with utmost historical accuracy. Gunfire is sparse and bullets rarely hit their marks. War is mostly a long, continuous walk through difficult terrain that ends huddled under a poncho and sombrero at night. His use of non-professional actors, some of them descendents of real Cristeros, adds authenticity to the piece. The Last Christeros features stunning photography of the men and their surroundings; without being dogmatic, Meyer crafts an emotion*ally evocative homage to Mexico’s defenders of religious freedom. Diana Sanchez
Director's Bio
Matias Meyer was born in Perpig*nan, France. He studied at the Centro de Capacitación Cinematográfica in Mexico City. He has directed the short films The Passenger (04) and Verde (06). His feature films are Wadley (08), The Cramp (09) and The Last Cristeros (11).
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2011 Films - Last Christeros
I suppose that it's safe to assume that this group is no longer in existence, having been absorbed into the fold?
"And, as we Catholics know, Western Civilization is Roman Civilization, first classical Roman Civilization, then Roman Catholic Civilization, as the Christians preserved and carried classical Roman Civilization to the world in a Christianized form. That is, after all, why we are described as Roman Catholics."
Ah, apparently not:
Cristero War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The end of the Cristero War affected emigration to the United States. "In the aftermath of their defeat, many of the Cristeros — by some estimates as much as 5 percent of Mexico's population — fled to the U.S. Many of them made their way to Los Angeles, where they found a protector in John Joseph Cantwell, the bishop of what was then the Los Angeles-San Diego diocese."Under Archbishop Cantwell's sponsorship the Cristero refugees became a substantial community in Los Angeles, in 1934 staging a parade some 40,000 strong through the city."
"And, as we Catholics know, Western Civilization is Roman Civilization, first classical Roman Civilization, then Roman Catholic Civilization, as the Christians preserved and carried classical Roman Civilization to the world in a Christianized form. That is, after all, why we are described as Roman Catholics."
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