Sanfic Industria , the industry section of the Santiago International Film Festival running over August 18-25, is showcasing a slew of promising new fiction and non-fiction projects at its Santiago Labs. “We were overwhelmed by the number of entries this year, a 55% uptick from 2023,” said Sanfic Industria director Gabriela Sandoval, a co-founder of the festival. Out of the 28 selected Santiago Lab projects, 12 are directed by women.

“Among our many objectives, we have always aimed to expand opportunities for women filmmakers by equipping them with the essential tools and creating pathways for their success,” said Sandoval, a producer herself at Storyboard Media alongside festival co-founder Carlos Nuñez. She added that nearly 50% of the Santiago Lab projects are produced by women. Some projects are presented by established producers like Chile’s Lucas Engel, who backed such notable dramas as “Tengo Miedo Torero” and “Los Huesos.

” Lauded filmmaker Nicolás Videla, who identifies himself as binary (“Travesía Travesti,” “Naomi Campbell”), is co-directing a documentary about a transsexual vedette in “The Criminal Record of Madame Wittmann.” Costa Rica’s recent Berlinale-winning director Antonella Sudasassi (“Memories of a Burning Body”) produces the directorial debut of Manrique Cortés, “Monsters.” Most of the fiction projects are dramas inspired by personal experiences and memories.

The documentaries cover a wide range of subject m.