Someone alerted me to this post and web site, looks cool. I'm a Canadian-British filmmaker living in Spain, directing a series of documentaries on wine as culture and history, and just finished the 50 minute documentary cited above. The link to the trailer is
It was made early on in the process and includes interviews with Rafael Vivanco, the winemaker, and Santiago Vivanco who directs the Museum and Foundation.
(The full 50 mintute documentary will be screening at Anthology Film Archives, 32 Second Avenue, NYC, at 8:30, June 30, 2010, along with another film on wine. Their will be a reception with wine starting at 7:30.)
I've been back twice since, the last time to interview their father, Pedro Vivanco. Out of nearly 100 interviews that I've conducted, many of them first rate and very impressive, this one has to be the most amazing. He started off delivering wine on a bicycle. He then went off to study wine making and ended up top of his class, and came back to become a major figure in the transformation Rioja wine, and made and blended the wines for well known wineries which, in some cases, did little more than put their own labels on it.
None of the other interviewees gave their wife half the credit, nor did they talk about making sure that their children worked their way from the bottom, including cleaning tanks.
Dinastia Vivanco is their flagship winery, putting their own name on their wines, using their best grapes, and giving them credit where credit is due. It is Rafael rather than Pedro who makes the wine. It was opened in 1994, and have heard remarks that the wine has improved a lot since they first opened. They are also winning medals in competition, including a couple of golds when I was there about a month ago.
I'm not an expert nor have the most sensitive nose or palate in the world, but have tasted a lot of wine over the last couple of years. I really like their three single varietal wines - Garnacha, Mazuelo, Graciano. Their crianza is a very pleasant wine to drink. They hold blind tastings putting their wines against higher priced wines, and do well, which I guess means you get good quality for the price range.
My documentary, btw, is not a promotional video. I take a neutral stance in all my wine documentaries, letting the interviewees talk for themselves about their lives, histories and attitudes. The invite to the screening can be found here -
http://zevrobinson.com/wp-content/u...nco-at-Anthology-Film-Archives-NYC-invite.pdf