Blond view of Cuba a little on the light side
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Luis Pena
Don’t let the title fool you, as “Cuba Libre” isn’t a blood bath
about freeing Cuba, but a coming-of-age story set in Holguin, Cuba,
during Fidel Castro’s “revolucion” in 1958.
“Cuba Libre” stars Harvey Keitel, Iben Hjejle, Diana Bracho and
Andhy Mendez.
The Boy (Mendez), whose name is never mentioned, parallels the
changing country he lives in, which starts at the local theater while
he’s watching the film “Julia” (“Julie” is the English title)
starring blond actress Doris Day (I’ll get to the blond hair later).
During a small shootout during “Julia,” the power goes out and the
Boy can’t see the film’s end.
The light in the theater going out and the gunfire in “Julia”
pretentiously foreshadow the rest of the film.
Che (Keitel), the Boy’s grandfather, has a Rick from “Casablanca”
feel to him. He owns a casino and seems to placate the present
Batista regime and Castro’s rebels.
There’s a black minstrel in the town who comes out from time to
time, another foreshadower who shouts out such things as “Because
there is no democracy, there has to be a war.”
The Boy is caught while trying to steal mangos from Julia, the
“gringa” (Hjejle) who lives in a gated home. They befriend each other
and Julia, who happens to be blond and happens to have the same name
as the Doris Day character, becomes the hormonal boy’s confidant. He
shares things with her that he won’t with anyone else, like the crush
he has on a girl named Carmen (Farah Alfonseca). He learns about love
or what he perceives it to be not only from Julia and his crush on
Carmen, but also from his grandfather -- who’s also Julia’s lover,
then death during the bloodiest scene in the film, when his rival
Ricky (Gael Garcia Bernal) commits suicide after shooting two
officers.
Except for a few characters, the film could have used more
development, or a cut in its star-laden cast. It would have been
great to find out why Julia was in Cuba. Did Che bring her over to be
his mistress or was she escaping her own darkness?
The movie tries to be lighthearted and dark simultaneously, but
the light-heartedness dominates, too often leaving the viewer wanting
more.
As history tells us, Castro won the “revolucion,” and soon after
the power, which had been cut off from Holguin, returns and the lives
of those in that small town go on in a new way.
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