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Morelia is a constantly growing city that has great tourism potential, as it is one of Mexico's most important cultural centers. It is known worldwide for being an artistic center and participating in international festivals as well as having its own attractions, especially the Historic Center's artistic splendor and beautiful architecture.
Part of our outlook at Morelia Invita is to provide visitors with a practical, detailed guide to the activities in all aspects of local and foreign culture where we are situated.
We hope to also give our visitors and tourists the best options in accommodations and entertainment, so that their stay will be pleasant. We also offer good viable possibilities for people who want to call Morelia home.
Learn about our history, traditions and culture. Walk through the streets and plazas, enjoy restaurants, hotels and bars. Mingle with the people - your people. Learn in our museums and universities. Delight in the theater, music, dance and exhibitions. Lose yourself in movies, sports and so much more.
Discover everything there is to enjoy here…
MORELIA INVITA… BECAUSE YOU WANT GET TO KNOW IT!!!
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Morelia´s Cathedral.
Foto: Paulo Vidales/Imagen Latente |
Morelia is a spectacular 16th-century colonial city with approximately 650,000 inhabitants. It has its own international airport and is situated strategically in the center of Mexico, connected by modern highways to Mexico City (3.5-hour drive), Guadalajara (3.5-hour drive) and Ixtapa-Zihuatanejo (4-hour drive).
Morelia enjoys excellent weather throughout the year and has just the right infrastructure to host the Morelia International Film Festival, an intimate and exciting annual film event. Morelia’s architectural splendor, the natural beauty of its surroundings, and its venerable cultural tradition have earned it the distinction of being declared a UNESCO Cultural World Heritage Site in 1991.
The Morelia International Film Festival is open to the public and welcomes visitors from throughout Mexico and around the world. Our mission is to promote a new generation of Mexican filmmakers and to serve as a unique meeting point between Mexican filmmakers, the public of Michoacán and the international community of film-lovers.

Tarascas fountain.
Foto: Paulo Vidales/Imagen Latente
Getting to Morelia:
See the online English-language Frommer’s 2006 Guide for information on traveling to Morelia:
http://www.frommers.com/destinations/morelia/0912010002.html
The information included in the Frommer's Guide is subject to change. For travel questions including bus and limo transportation, don't hesitate to consult with your travel agent, or with the English-speaking travel agency Viajes Tardan in Mexico City (5255/5514-6752 and 5255/5525-8179).
The Morelia International Film Festival offers the hotel information listed here as a helpful guide. The Morelia International Film Festival does not work directly with these hotels and is not responsible for the services they provide.
Casa en el Campo, hotel y spa Category:
 | | Casa en el Campo, hotel y spa | | La Camelina No. 830 Col. San José del Cerrito Morelia, Mich. CP 58341 (Opción 1: Entrada por Libramiento Sur, en el semáforo de Costco) (Opción 2: Entrada por Carretera Salida a Pátzcuaro, a un costado de Bimbo)
C.P. 58341
Phones: (443) 320-0620 (443) 320-0636 01800 570 7195 Fax: (443) 320-0634
bienvenidos@casaenelcampo.com
www.casaenelcampo.com
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Casa de la Loma Hotel & Suites Category:
 | | Casa de la Loma Hotel & Suites | | |
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Casa de Las Rosas Suites Hotel & Restaurante Category:
 | | Casa de Las Rosas Suites Hotel & Restaurante | | |
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Suites San Miguel Category:
 | | Suites San Miguel | | Morelos sur No. 7- Altos Centro Historico, A un costado de Catedral.
Phones: (443) 312-0122 01-800-570-70-65
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Hotel Fiesta Inn Category:
 | | Hotel Fiesta Inn | | |
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Villa San José Hotel & Suites Category:
 | | Villa San José Hotel & Suites | | |
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Casa del Virrey Hotel & Suites Category:
 | | Casa del Virrey Hotel & Suites | | Calle del trabajo no. 12 y 18 Centro Histórico de Morelia
C.P. 58000
Phones: (443) 321-5400 (443) 321-5401 Fax: (443) 3215401
casadelvirrey@prodigy.net.mx
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Hotel Aranzazu Category:
 | | Hotel Aranzazu | | | |
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Hotel Casino Best Western
 | | Hotel Casino Best Western | | |
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Hotel Catedral Category:
 | | Hotel Catedral | | |
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Hotel Diana del Bosque Category:
 | | Hotel Diana del Bosque | | Rafael Carrillo No. 144, Col. Cuauhtémoc, casi esquina con av. Ventura Puente
C.P. 58020
Phones: +(443) 317-2081 +(443) 317-8454 01800 696 03 66 Fax: (443) 317-2085
ventas.hoteldiana@hotmail.com
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Howard Johnson Calle Real Morelia Category:
 | | Howard Johnson Calle Real Morelia | | |
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Hotel Morelia Imperial Category:
 | | Hotel Morelia Imperial | | Guadalupe Victoria No 245, col. Centro
C.P. 58000
Phones: +(443) 313-2300 (443) 313-2227 Fax: +(443) 317-0171
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Hotel Plaza Morelos Category:
 | | Hotel Plaza Morelos | | |
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Hotel Posada Vista Bella Category:
 | | Hotel Posada Vista Bella | | |
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Hotel & Suites Galería Category:
 | | Hotel & Suites Galería | | |
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Quality Inn Category:
 | | Quality Inn | | |
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Torreblanca Business Class Category:
 | | Torreblanca Business Class | | |
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Hotel Villa Capri Category:
 | | Hotel Villa Capri | | Av. Madero Poniente 2069 (salida a Guadalajara)
Phones: Tels: (43) 16-3336
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Hotel Concordia Category:
 | | Hotel Concordia | | |
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Hotel Valladolid Category:
 | | Hotel Valladolid | | Portal Hidalgo No. 245, Centro Histórico
C.P. 58000
Phones: +(443) 312-0027
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Torreblanca Campestre Category:
 | | Torreblanca Campestre | | |
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Hostel Allende Category:
 | | Hostel Allende | | |
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Hotel Estefanía Category:
 | | Hotel Estefanía | | |
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Hotel Posada el Cortijo Category:
 | | Hotel Posada el Cortijo | | |
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Rincón Tarasco Category:
 | | Rincón Tarasco | | |
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Hostal de María
 | | Hostal de María | | ORTEGA Y MONTAÑEZ 842 CENTRO (Atras del Hospital Civil)
C.P. 58000
Phones: (443) 3128587 (443) 3171721 Fax: (443) 3175904
hdm@hostalmorelia.com
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Trip Advisor:
If for any reason the hotels listed above do not meet your needs, please contact any of the following travel agencies, who will be happy to help you find a good option for you. Please be sure to tell the travel agent you are interested in attending the festival so they can help you obtain any special discounts that might be available.

PHILLIPS TURISMO INTERNACIONAL, S.A. DE C.V.
Av. Coyoacán No. 1878 - 606, Col. Del Valle
CP 03100
Delegación Benito Juárez
México, DF
Phones: +52 (55) 5524-0420
VIAJES JET S.A. DE C. V.
20 de Noviembre No. 66 Centro Histórico
CP 58000
Morelia Michoacán
Contact: Mónica Bollain
Phones: +52 (443) 312-1188 y 312-1199
Opening hours Monday to Friday 10-3 and 5-8, Saturday 10-2
mbollainparra@yahoo.com.mx
monybollain@hotmail.com
VIAJES TARDAN
Durango 243 - 202 Col. Roma
CP 06700
Mexico City.
Contact: Lorenza Tardan
Phones: +52 (55) 5514-6752 y 5525-8179
Opening hours Monday to Friday 9-7
tardan@prodigy.net.mx
IN-OUT
Tours & Travel
Av. Madero Poniente 398 Int. 5 Planta Alta
Col. Centro
CP 58000
Morelia, Michoacán
Contact: Marcelo Subtil
Phones: +52 (443) 312-2233
Reservations: 01-800-0046088
Contact: info@in-out.com.mx
www.in-out.com.mx
Festival Publications
Screenings
Tickets
Events
Things to do in Morelia
Patzcuaro
Once you arrive in Morelia, make sure you pick up a free copy of the official film schedule and a map of Morelia at any of the Festival venues upon arrival.

Aqueduct. Morelia, Michoacan. Photo by: Paulo Vidales/Imagen Latente
We suggest you buy a copy of the catalogue to find out about this year's films, special guests, conferences, round tables, and other events.
Internet: If your hotel doesn't have internet access, try one of the following cyber cafes: Centro Interactivo de Comunicación, Melchor Ocampo #215 or Chat Room Cybercafe, El Nigromante 132-A.
Drugstores: The following drugstores are located downtown: Farmacias Guadalajara, Morelos Sur #117 (in front of the Cathedral) and Gems III, Ana Ma. Gallaga No. 911-A.
Information: For general information and Morelia International Film Festival publications, visit Melchor Ocampo #35, downtown, behind the Palacio de Gobierno. Or call the Festival office at 443 317-7801.
Screenings:
The festival’s films are exhibited in downtown Morelia at the Cinépolis Centro movie theatre, the festival’s main site, as well as at its alternate sites, Cinépolis Plaza Morelia and Cinépolis La Huerta, each located a short cab-ride from downtown. There are free screenings at the Palacio Clavijero as well as free open air screenings at the Plaza Benito Juárez. Moreover, the festival offers a series of free screenings at the Teatro Emperador, a 1930's-era cinema palace in downtown Pátzcuaro, which is a 40-minute cab-ride from Morelia.
Many film screenings, especially those in competition, will afterwards have a question-and-answer session with the directors of the films.
Screenings at Cinépolis Centro, Cinépolis Plaza Morelia and Cinépolis La Huerta require ticket purchase.
In general, the films in competition are in Spanish with English subtitles, and most of the international features are subtitled in both Spanish and English. Please consult the Festival Hand-Program to make sure the film you are going to watch is available in a language you speak.
Tickets:
In order to make the festival’s films accessible to a wide audience, we offer tickets at a significant discount from regular movie-ticket prices (less than US$3 per ticket). It is also possible to buy packs of four tickets (less than US$10) for an additional discount. Seats are subject to limited availability. Please arrive at least 15 minutes before show time. Festival screenings are not preceded by promotional trailers for other films. Seats cannot be reserved. Tickets can be bought at the ticket-counters the day of the screening, or in advance online at:

(find the film you wish to see and click the “Compra Reserva” button to the right of it, then follow the instructions).
Events:
In general, conferences, round tables, and exhibits described in the catalog are free, with no ticket required. Space is usually limited, so admittance is granted on a first-come first-served basis.
Things to do in Morelia
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Morelia·s Cathedral.
Foto: Paulo Vidales/Imagen Latente |
Set against a stunning backdrop of perfectly preserved colonial buildings, Morelia is one of the most vibrant cultural destinations in Mexico. A walk down its streets leads to a fascinating discovery of the city's 15th and 16th century architecture. Begin at Benito Juárez square, where you will see the city's magnificent rose-tinted quarry stone cathedral, which was begun in 1660 and completed in 1744.
The Cathedral's monumental organ, a treasure in itself, has 4,600 pipes and was built at the beginning of last century. Catch the spectacular "light and sound" show during the weekends, or admire the cathedral's beautiful lighting every night of the week.
Continue towards the Templo de la Merced, a baroque temple built in 1604 by the Mercedarians, or make your way to the Museo de Artesanías (Arts and Crafts Museum), which displays an important collection of crafts, sells a wide selection of pieces from all over the country, and hosts exhibits, conferences and trade fairs.
The Museo del Dulce (Candy Museum) will give you an idea of how Morelia's famous confections --the dulce de leche (a slow-cooked, thickened combination of milk and sugar), morelianas (thin wafers of caramelized sugar) and several types of ate (paste or jelly made from fruits such as guavas or sour pears)-- were prepared in vice royal times. You can also watch a video that will give you a complete history of candy-making in Morelia, see scale models of the city's old houses, or enjoy a tour by one of the museum guides dressed in period costume.
Continue your walk toward the Fuente de las Tarascas and the aqueduct, which consists of 253 high stone arches. Built to supply the city with water, the aqueduct was commissioned by the bishop Fray Antonio de San Miguel in 1785.
Built at the end of the 18th century, The Palacio Municipal's main attraction is its octagonal patio. Also worth a visit are the Templo and Conservatorio de Música de Las Rosas (the Music Conservatory); the Clavijero Palace, a Jesuit collage turned government building and cultural center, home to many of the FICM's activities; the Public Library, also one of the Festival's main venues; and the Crafts Market, where you can find quality craft products at affordable prices.

Public Library of the UMSNH.
Foto: Paulo Vidales/Imagen Latente
You can find good restaurants under the portales (arcades). The capital of the state of Michoacán has much more to offer: for more information, visit:
Frommer’s Guide
English-language tourism information about Morelia by Frommer’s writer David Baird: click Here
Official Morelia website: Spanish-language tourism information about Morelia from the city government: www.visitmorelia.com
Official Michoacán website:
Spanish-language tourism information about Morelia from the state government:
www.turismomichoacan.gob.mx
Patzcuaro
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Teatro Emperador, Pátzcuaro, Mich.
Foto: Paulo Vidales/Imagen Latente |
Some festival attendees prefer to spend a part of the festival, or all of it, in Pátzcuaro, which is a 40-minute drive from Morelia on a four-lane highway. The festival holds special screenings in Pátzcuaro’s downtown cinema palace, the Teatro Emperador.
Sited overlooking a volcanic lake high
(alt. 7100 feet) in the mountains of Michoacán,
Pátzcuaro is an “exquisite colonial gem [with]
rich Indian heritage in relative peace and quiet,”
according to New York Times travel writer David Kirby.
“… the peace and beauty of the place [are]
almost overwhelming. The town is a garden of parks, plazas
and fountains, of ancient churches, crumbling monasteries
and whitewashed houses with tiled roofs, of flickering
gaslights and blood-red bougainvillea spilling over crooked
balconies.”
Pátzcuaro was a religious center of the pre-Columbian
Purépecha civilization. Thanks to the utopian ideals
of a 16th Century Catholic Bishop, Don Vasco de Quiroga,
Pátzcuaro and the neighboring Purépecha
villages were assigned separate crafts, such as pottery-making
and coppersmithying, which the native people carry on
with pride to this day. Don Vasco remains a beloved figure,
and his statue stands tall in the center of Patzcuaro’s
main plaza. The old Purépecha deities and their
frequent musical and colorful festivals were incorporated
into the local Catholic rites, and today Pátzcuaro
is renowned for its almost-constant native religious festivals,
most famously the Day of the Dead at the end of October.

Hotels in Patzcuaro
For information on hotel options in Pátzcuaro, you may visit the following sites:
- Trip Advisor:
An extensive list of hotels in Pátzcuaro with descriptions in English and rankings by the Trip Advisor user-feedback system:
www.tripadvisor.com/
- Frommer’s Guide:
A limited list of hotels in Pátzcuaro with descriptions by the reputable Frommer’s English-language online guide, written by David Baird.
http://wiley.frommers.com/
- MEXonline:
An extensive list of hotels in Pátzcuaro with descriptions
in English
http://www.mexonline.com/
- Official Michoacan website:
An extensive list of hotels in Pátzcuaro using a star-category system with descriptions in Spanish:
http://www.michoacan-travel.com/
Things to do in Pátzcuaro
Located about 40 minutes from downtown Morelia, Pátzcuaro was an important religious center for the Purépecha people and the capital of colonial Michoacan from 1530 to 1580.

Teatro Calzonzin, Pátzcuaro, Mich.
Foto: Paulo Vidales/Imagen Latente
This lakeside town has spectacular views and beautiful colonial architecture, such as the Basílica de Nuestra Señora de la Salud, the Vasco de Quiroga square, the Casa de los Once Patios (House of Eleven Patios), a convent turned crafts market; the Antiguo Templo de San Agustín, built in 1576, where you can find the "Gertrudis Bocanegra" Public Library and the Caltzontzin Theater, one of the main Festival venues.
The island of Janitzio is Pátzcuaro's most famous attraction, along with its butterfly fishermen and its Day of the Dead celebrations. Hundreds of tourists flock to Pátzcuaro and hotel rooms are scarce during the month of November.
There are many towns around the lake that are worth exploring; each has different indigenous traditions and handicrafts.
For more information about hotels and activities visit:
www.moreliafilmfest.com/ASP/Patzcuaro2006.asp
Frommer’s Guide
Frommer’s writer David Baird says it best: “Pátzcuaro is perhaps the loveliest town in Mexico. Crooked cobblestone streets, smooth stucco walls painted white with dark red borders, blackened tile roofs that join to form ramshackle rooflines -- it is a town meant to be photographed and painted.”
For more information, you may visit the following sites:
- Frommer’s Guide:
English-language tourism information about Pátzcuaro by Frommer’s writer David Baird:
wiley.frommers.com/
- MEXonline:
English language tourism information about Pátzcuaro.
www.mexonline.com/
- Official Michoacan website:
Spanish-language tourism information about Pátzcuaro from the state government.
www.turismomichoacan.gob.mx/
- Official Pátzcuaro Website:
Spanish-language tourism information about Pátzcuaro from the local government.
http://www.patzcuaromexico.com/
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