Screening | Film/Video

El Grito (The Scream, Leobardo López Arretche, 1968)

This student-made film of one of the most tragic moments in Mexican history is a milestone in the Mexican documentary tradition.

Black and white film still of a group of young people walking with linked arms
Date
Mar 2, 2026
Cost
Free
Time
4 p.m. ET
Location
Wexner Center for the Arts

Film/Video Theater

Admission is first come, first served.

Free for all audiences with ticket

New Restoration

Banned by the government for many years, El Grito is an urgent, on-the-ground account of the growing student movement that gripped Mexico City in the days leading up to the 1968 Summer Olympics. During the summer months of 1968, student-led protests began to swell against the government’s lavish spending on the Olympics and repression of the media, unions, and public dissent. This movement came to an abrupt and violent end on October 2, 1968, when government troops fired upon protesters just 10 days before the opening of the Olympics. The death count of what is known as the Tlatelolco massacre is debated. The student movement and the Tlatelolco massacre were documented by university students led by Leobardo López Arretche, a film student who was deeply involved. Their film is a permanent record of an atrocity the Mexican government would not acknowledge for many years. In Spanish with English subtitles. (102 mins., DCP)

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