Agliberto Meléndez

Agliberto Meléndez
Born(1942-08-08)August 8, 1942
Altamira, Dominican Republic
DiedJuly 2, 2025(2025-07-02) (aged 82)
OccupationsFilm director, producer, screenwriter

Agliberto Meléndez (August 8, 1942 – July 2, 2025) was a Dominican film director best known as the director of A One-Way Ticket (Un Pasaje de Ida), the Dominican Republic's first feature-length film, produced entirely in the Dominican Republic by a Dominican cast and crew. The film became known to American audiences after its 1988 debut in New York City at the Museum of Modern Art's New Directors/New Films Festival. A One-Way Ticket gained some notoriety because of its macabre subject matter; the story of would-be immigrants who die in their desperate struggle to escape a fate of poverty and despair. A One-Way Ticket, shot under very adverse conditions, proved to everyone that it could be done.

Life and career

Meléndez was born on August 8, 1942.[1] In 1979, Agliberto Meléndez founded the Cinemateca Nacional, quickly becoming the meeting place for like-minded film enthusiasts. He single-handedly led the Cinemateca Nacional through very hard times but managed to stay afloat until it was finally forced to close its doors in 1986 following the election of right-wing candidate Joaquín Balaguer. The Cinemateca Nacional introduced classics from the world cinema to a fresh and enthusiastic new audience.

His perseverance and single-minded vision made Agliberto Meléndez the undisputed film pioneer of Dominican Cinema. Until his death, he taught cinema studies in the Dominican Republic. His second and last feature film: "Del Color de la Noche" based on the life of José Francisco Peña Gómez premiered in the Dominican Republic in 2015.

References

  1. ^ "BIOGRAFÍA DE LA SEMANA: Agliberto Meléndez Jiménez". cinemadominicano.com. Retrieved 2 July 2025.