‘Caribbean Eye’ film events set for Sept. 4

Prizewinning director Nelson Carlo de los Santos Arias comes to campus

The University of Cincinnati will host internationally acclaimed Dominican filmmaker Nelson Carlo de los Santos Arias, winner of the 2024 Berlin Film Festival Silver Bear for Best Director, for two special events on Thursday, Sept. 4.

The events are part of “Caribbean Eye,” an occasional UC film series coordinated by Mary Leonard, professor of film history.   

“‘Caribbean Eye’ films tell stories we may not have heard, set in places we may think we know but have not really seen. They use fresh approaches that leave viewers with new images of the Caribbean and new ideas to think about,” says Leonard.

Hear talks by Arias and screen 'Pepe' 

The day begins with “Studies of the Imagination,” an in-depth conversation with the director  about his experimental and genre-defying approach to filmmaking. The talk will be held from 12:30 to 1:50 p.m. in the Faculty Enrichment Center, second floor of Langsam Library. Admission is free and open to the public.

That evening, a screening of Arias’ award-winning film “Pepe” takes place at the nearby Esquire Theater at 7 p.m. The film tells the surreal story of the first and last hippo killed in the Americas — told from beyond the grave. Filmmaker Magazine describes “Pepe” as “a cinematic UFO perched somewhere between hard facts and dreams” and “a work that celebrates imagination as the ultimate means to emancipate ourselves.”

Following the screening, Arias will take part in an audience Q&A. Tickets are available on the Esquire Theater website.

The events are organized in connection with a course taught by Leonard (Film and the Caribbean) and are sponsored by UC’s School of Communications, Film and Media Studies, Department of Romance Languages, English Department and the Niehoff Film Fund.

Tickets

With support from the Niehoff Film Fund, UC students and faculty may claim free tickets for the screening by RSVPing thru Eventbrite.

Follow the Caribbean Eye Instagram page for more information about this and other “Caribbean Eye” events.

Featured photo at top of Nelson Carlo de los Santos Arias, provided by Leonard.

Impact Lives Here

The University of Cincinnati is leading public urban universities into a new era of innovation and impact. Our faculty, staff and students are saving lives, changing outcomes and bending the future in our city's direction. Next lives here.

Related Stories

1

UC professor leads film students to the future

April 6, 2026

As a kid, at the age of 10, Marty Schiff’s dad gave him a Kodak Brownie movie camera, and that led to a lifetime of creating stories on film. He spent his summers with that camera, making eight-millimeter movies, with a camera that taught him how to thread a projector, change the film in a closet, and tell stories with the medium he loved. “I always wanted to go to Hollywood,” Schiff says. So later he did, with $200 in his pocket, and began a career that has spanned acting, directing, producing—pretty much everything with the exception of costumes (“I’m not really good with a sewing machine,” he says).

3

On track: Hoffman Honors Scholar studies public transit

April 2, 2026

Public transit is where Zane Sawyer’s lifelong passion for travel meets his commitment to making an impact. The University of Cincinnati first-year geography major in the College of Arts & Sciences and member of the second cohort of Hoffman Honors Scholars (HHS) has hit the ground running, designing a research project intended to capture both how public transit works and how its users perceive it.