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Guantanamera

New Yorker Video // Unrated // October 10, 2000
List Price: $29.95 [Buy now and save at Amazon]

Review by Gil Jawetz | posted March 18, 2002 | E-mail the Author

Cuban culture has reached these shores mostly in the form of music like the Buena Vista Social Club and baseball. 1993's Strawberry and Chocolate was a rare Cuban film to gain attention in the US. The same filmmakers (Juan Carlos Tabío and Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, who passed away in 1996) also directed Guantanamera (1994), a well-made mix of comedy, drama, and social criticism.

The story involves Adolfo (Carlos Cruz), a lower-rank Communist party leader in Cuba, and his attempt to streamline the apparently bustling corpse transportation industry. In his overly complex Communist bureaucrat mind no one province should be stuck with the job of transporting corpses across the entire length of the island when people die away from their homes. His plan is for each province to provide an escort from provincial border to border.

This needlessly complex system is bound to cause problems and does as soon as Adolfo, his wife Georgina (Mirta Ibarra), and an elderly gentleman Candido (Raul Eguren), begin to escort the famous singer Yoyita (Conchita Brando) across Cuba. Adolfo, who treats his wife like crap, soon begins to grate on everyone's nerves, and when Georgina runs into a truck-driver named Mariano (Jorge Perugorria), a former student of hers, on the road, it becomes clear that she really wants to be with someone else. Throughout the film the two meet again and again at different checkpoints and gas stations and their mutual affection becomes clear.

This sort of plot could easily become too cute for its own good, but the cast and the dialog keep the film lively and original. Some twists in the road are actually unpredictable and the realistic, likeable characters draw the viewer in. The film is also helped by wry observations on the inadequacies of Cuban daily life, like the crowds of people waiting along the road waiting to hitchhike in the backs of trucks since there is no real public transportation to speak of.

The film strikes a perfect balance between social and political criticism and sweet love story. By the end Georgina and Mariano seem so perfect for each other that you can't help put aside your usual skepticism over romantic comedies and feel good.

VIDEO:
The full-screen video is soft and grainy. Will the locations and much of the cinematography are beautiful wither the source elements or the transfer are not up to par. The image lacks the crispness that even most low budget films display and the colors are not as vibrant as they should be.

AUDIO:
The mono soundtrack is serviceable, if a bit muddy. Permanent English subtitles appear along with the Spanish dialog.

EXTRAS:
The trailer as well as some pretty comprehensive cast and director filmographies.

FINAL THOUGHTS:
On the surface Guantanamera. looks like just another romantic comedy will some sort of tropical flavor. Over time, however, it turns out to be a real pleasant surprise. It is a thoughtful, funny, moving film about well drawn characters with more than the usual stereotypical dimensions.

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