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Humberto Solas Movies

Alongside Santiago Alvarez and Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, Humberto Solas ranks as one of the three most esteemed and influential Cuban filmmakers of the 20th century and helped spearhead the Cuban film renaissance via his extensive involvement with the Cuban film board, or Instituto Cubano de Arte e Industria Cinematográficos (ICAIC). Like Alvarez, Solas sought to unify art and revolutionary leftwing politics through innovative aestheticizing techniques; unlike Alvarez, Solas chiefly pursued these goals within the frameworks of fictional narratives in lieu of stylized documentary. Born in 1942 amid economically disadvantageous circumstances, Solas initially planned to study architecture, but these plans came to naught in 1959 when the government shut down the country's universities in light of the then-nascent Castro revolution sweeping through the country. Solas aggressively fought in the revolution and when the Castro government was in place, accepted an offer from the ICAIC to join its ranks on the basis of an exciting short film he had made. Thus, a new filmmaker was born. Thereafter, Solas moved into documentary work for a time, embarking on one of his first major projects, Casablanca (1961) at the tender age of 19. Six features followed, capped off by two seminal and still influential masterworks: the 1966 Manuela -- a dramatization of the Castro revolution -- and the 1969 Lucia, the opus that finally catapulted Solas to international acclaim. This tripartite feature blends revolutionary fervor, sociopolitical insight, and feminist politics as it tells the fictionalized tale of three women, each named Lucia at different points in Cuban history (1895, 1933, and the early '60s, respectively) experiencing political and personal revolution. Solas' genius lay not merely in melding all of the said ideological concerns into engrossing narratives, but in identifying a unique revolutionary visual style to drive each of the segments. The film deservedly picked up one of the top prizes at the Moscow Film Festival, and prompted Variety's Gene Moskowitz to praise, "Director Humberto Solas displays extraordinary filmic erudition and knowhow...[The film] also has some stunning insights into the period and the right visual metaphors...Acting is also incisive and tactfully handled."
This of course marked a dynamite launching pad for Solas' foray into the international film community. Follow-up efforts were equally dynamic and electric, if less influential. He spent much of the 1970s and early '80s cinematically depicting the pushes for revolution in various societies, including Haiti (Simparele, 1974) and Chile (Cantata de Chile, 1975). Cantata earned particularly glorious praise for its inventive narrative and visual bravura in its ability to convincingly relay Chile's transition from conquistador-driven exploitation to the government takeover of various commercial industries. As time passed, Solas revealed increasingly sophisticated dramatic and conceptual tendencies and thus drifted further and further away from the risk of ideological didacticism, even though his political bias remained fixed. The said transitions were most evident via the efforts Cecilia Valdés (1982) and Amada (1984). The former tells of a series of loves and losses of the titular Cuban woman, thrown against the backdrop of the brutality and inhumanity of slavery (including the satanic annihilation of the native Cuban population); the latter revisits Solas' feminist concerns, and his interest in exploring the intersection between the personal and the political (societal), with its period tale of a gentle yet fragile young woman manipulated by virtually every man in sight, at the time of Cuba's sociopolitical corruption during the 1914 sugar cane boom. 1986's Un Hombre de Exito fared even better, critically speaking, than its predecessors; it explicitly recalled Coppola's first two Godfather films, with its tale of the massive personal shifts undergone by two brothers (César Évora and Jorge Trinchet) from the early '30s through the late '50s; one evolves into a violent anarchist, the other into a successful entrepreneur. The anarchist brother "plays both ends" of the political spectrum, which leads to his own imminent destruction; Solas uses the story to address human exploitation and the harm inherent in the attainment of unchecked wealth and power, as well as the danger of blind political allegiance. A number of additional releases followed Un Hombre de Exito, including 1992's El Siglo de las Luces and 1998's short documentary Retrato de la Habana, but two Solas features during the following decade attained greater significance: the 2001 Honey for Oshun -- a critically worshipped drama about a Cuban exile, based in Miami, who embarks on a search for his biological mother and his ethnic heritage -- and the much different-in-tone Barrio Cuba (2005), a droll seriocomedy about several economically strafed Cubans living on the margins of society and their shared need for meaningful personal relationships (romantic and otherwise) and economic sanctity. Variety rhapsodized of Barrio, "this warmly human portrait of a society desperately seeking upbeat moments in relentlessly downbeat circumstances provides an invaluable cinematic record of a city that looks on the verge of collapse," and praised the film's "raw energy." Sadly, Barrio marked Solas' last major work, though most anyone would concur that he left behind an astonishing cinematic legacy shared by few directors. He died of cancer in September 2008, at the age of 66. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi
2005  
 
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Filmmaker Humberto Solas weaves together three stories of people struggling to find love and security on the margins of life in Havana in this poignant comedy-drama. Magalis (Luisa Maria Jimenez) is a nurse who has become the unwitting target of repeated romantic advances from Ignacio Mario Limonta), a man many years her senior who works in a lumberyard. One day, Ignacio is seriously injured while on the job, and he's taken to the hospital, where to his delight and her annoyance Magalis is assigned to look after him. Elsewhere, El Chino (Jorge Perugorria) is a truck driver who has fallen in love with Vivian (Isabel Santos), who works in a drugstore. Vivian and Chino's relationship is deeply passionate, and they're both delighted when she discovers she's pregnant. However, their joy turns to lingering grief when she suffers a miscarriage. And finally, Maria (Ana Dominguez) has been quarreling with her husband Santo (Rafael Lahera) and leaves him, which is worrisome for Santo since she's pregnant with his child. Eventually, Maria reconsiders and comes home, to the joy and relief of Santo and his mother Amparo (Adela Legra). However, the fates have decided their happiness will be short lived. Barrio Cuba received its American premiere at the 2006 Palm Springs Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Luisa Maria JimenezJorge Perugorría, (more)
 
2001  
R  
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A Cuban exile searches for his long-lost mother, as well as his cultural heritage, in this drama. Roberto Delgado (Jorge Perugorria) is a college professor living in Miami who was born in Cuba; Roberto and his father fled Cuba shortly before the final stages of the revolution, and he grew up believing that his mother Carmen abandoned the family rather than join them in the United States. After 32 years in America, Roberto has developed a gnawing curiosity about Carmen, the mother he hasn't seen in over three decades, and decides to take a vacation in Cuba in hopes of finding her. In Havana, Roberto tracks down his cousin, Pilar (Isabel Santos), who informs him that his father actually kidnapped him, taking him to the United States against his mother's wishes, and that Carmen was so distraught by the loss of her child that she ended up in a mental institution. With Pilar's help, Roberto sets out to find his mother, with taxi driver Antonio (Mario Limonta) as their guide and driver, though it sometimes seems as if the harder they look for Carmen, the father away she seems to get. Honey for Oshun was the first Cuban production shot on digital video equipment; it received its North American premier at the 2001 Montreal Film Festival, and was later shown in competition at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Jorge PerugorríaIsabel Santos, (more)
 
1986  
 
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The lives of two brothers take different paths in this Cuban political drama. Javier becomes a successful businessman, while his brother Dario becomes a bomb-planting anarchist caught up in Cuba's political turmoil. The story begins in 1932 and progresses through the early days of Fidel Castro's rise to power. ~ Iotis Erlewine, Rovi

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Starring:
Cesar EvoraRaquel Revuelta, (more)
 
1984  
 
Trapped in artificiality because of its stilted, turn-of-the-20th century dialogue -- and therefore distancing its viewers -- Amada is the story of an older woman who falls in love with a younger man but is constrained from reaching out to him because of the stringent social morés of the time. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Eslinda NunezCesar Evora, (more)
 
1982  
 
The story of Cecilia is a story of the society that dominated 19th-century Cuba, a society divided between whites, blacks, and those who were mixed, the mulattos. (Since the Spanish conquistadors killed off the Indian population in Cuba not long after they took over the island, there are no mestizos, or those of mixed-Indian blood in Cuba as in other Caribbean nations.) At any rate, the drama about the life and loves of Cecilia (Daisy Granados) takes place against the backdrop of graphically violent mistreatment of slaves and the rumors of a slave rebellion after the Cubans hear of slaves turning against their captors in Haiti. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Daisy GranadosRaquel Revuelta, (more)
 
1976  
 
This Cuban film explores the history of oppression and exploitation in Latin America from the time of the Conquistadors to the CIA-sponsored overthrow of Allende in Chile. Particular emphasis is given to the Chilean army's massacre of striking mineworkers who worked in an English-owned nitrate mine. Poems, songs, artwork, and worker discussions carry forward the Party line in this political re-education-type film. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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1969  
 
Made in Cuba, Lucia tells three stories of three periods in Cuban history, each featuring a heroine named Lucia. The first playlet takes place in 1895: Lucia #1 (Raquel Revlizita) neglects her husband in order to become involved in the war against Spain -- and incidentally, with a handsome young insurgent. The second story transpires in 1932: Lucia #2 (Eslina Nunez), a divorced mother, aids in overthrowing the corrupt Cuban dictator. The third story is set somewhat indeterminately during the Castro regime. Our third Lucia (Adela Legra) is, like her predecessors, a free-thinker and a rebel, who finally stands up to her particular oppressor: her loutish husband. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Raquel RevueltaEslinda Nunez, (more)