| Sergio Corrieri, Salvador Wood , Jose
Gallardo , Raul Garcia, Luz Maria Collaso, Jean Bouise .
An unabashed exercise in cinema stylistics,
I Am Cuba is pro-Castro/anti-Batista rhetoric dressed up in the
finest clothes. The film's four dramatic stories take place in the
final days of the Batista regime; the first two illustrate the ills
that led to the revolution, the third and fourth the call to arms
which cut across social and economic lines. A lovely young woman
in a nightclub frequented by crass American businessmen takes a
customer to her modest seaside shack for a night of pleasure for
pay, only to be found out by her street vendor suitor; a tenant
farmer is told that his crop has been sold to United Fruit and in
frustration burns his fields; a middle-class student rallies his
pals and workers in a street demonstration against the regime; a
peasant eking out a living in the mountains quickly converts to
the cause when Batista bombers strafe his land in search of rebel
fighters. At face value, this is all obvious agitprop, but director
Mikhail Kalazatov turned his cinematographer, Sergei Urusevsky,
loose, and the result is a procession of dazzling black-and-white
images, shot with a camera that is almost always moving and soaring
over the sugar fields, swooping in and out of urban buildings, following
characters down narrow streets. Unreleasable to American theaters
during the Cold War, I Am Cuba, through the auspices of filmmakers
Francis Ford Coppola and Martin Scorsese, got a belated U.S. release
in 1995 and has proved to be both a time capsule of a fading political
movement and a timeless work of cinematic art. |