
José Cardoso
Directing
Born 1984-10-03 · Cuenca, Ecuador
José Cardoso, Seydú’s father, filmmaker, illustrator, and graphic designer, has developed fiction films, stop motion animation, and documentaries, constantly questioning what reality is, revolving around surrealism, consciousness, and anti-colonialism. With his feature-length documentary “Iwianch, el diablo venado” (94 min. 2021), which tells the story of the disappearance of a young Amazonian indigenous man kidnapped by the devil, he won the Tom Berman Award for Most Promising Filmmaker at the 50th Ann Arbor Film Festival. His subsequent work, “What the Soil Remembers” (29 min., 2023), documentary examining the trauma of a community uprooted during the South African apartheid regime, won the Ammodo Tiger Award for best short film at the Rotterdam Film Festival. And his latest documentary, “Flores” (29 min., 2024), in which he links his intimate and family life during the COVID-19 pandemic with an ethnocide in the Amazon that is justified by the war in Ukraine, won the International Short Film Competition at the Sheffield DocFest 2024. His works have been presented at the Sitges Fantastic Film Festival, the New Latin American Film Festival in Havana, Oberhausen, VIFF Vancouver, among others. All his works have been created collectively at the Jiráfica story factory in collaboration with colleagues whom José considers his family.
Crew

Flowers
Director of Photography

Flowers
Editor

Flowers
Director

Behind the Mist
Editor

Behind the Mist
Writer

Behind the Mist
Producer

What the Soil Remembers
Director

Iwianch, the Devil Deer
Producer

Iwianch, the Devil Deer
Director

Guión
Director

Guión
Editor

Ancestral Song
Writer

Ancestral Song
Animation

Ancestral Song
Director

Sr. Quinde
Director