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Blue and not so pink

Blue and not so pink Azul y no tan rosa

Blue and not so pink is a Spanish-Venezuelan film directed by Actor and Director Miguel Ferrari, being the first Venezuelan film to win the Goya Award for best Ibero-American film of 2013. This film addresses controversial topics such as homosexuality, transsexuality, gender violence and homophobia. The story tells about Diego Martínez, thirty one years of age, a successful arts and fashion photographer from Caracas, who at 15 had sexual relations with a friend from school who became pregnant. A child (Armando) is born and the three live as a family for a little more than 10 years until Diego and Valentina separate, which prompts Valentina (Armando's mother) to emigrate to Spain with her son Armando in search of a better future. Diego was not a very responsible father, he almost never called his son. So when Diego decides to formalize his relationship with Fabrizio di Giaccomo (a renowned obstetrician-gynecologist from a conservative family of Italian origin) by living with him, he is unexpectedly forced to take care of his son Armando, a teenager, almost 16 years with low self-esteem and in some ways insecure of himself who returns from Spain because he has not seen Diego, his father for more than 5 years. The boy arrives with a baggage of reproaches against his father for having abandoned him. So it won't be easy for Diego to reestablish an emotional relationship with him. The film culminates with Armando's return to Madrid after having stayed in Caracas for several months, where the father-son relationship between Armando and Diego is reestablished.

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