Posted on 06/20/2006 6:49:48 AM PDT by Dqban22
A must see movie. In Houston on Friday June 23 at the River Oaks Theater, 2009 West Gray. Ph: 713-866-8881 www.landmarktheaters.com
Movie critics aghast at Andy Garcias The Lost City
Humberto Fontova* BrookesNews.Com Monday 8 May 2006
Andy Garcia blew it big-time with his movie The Lost City. He blew it with the mainstream critics, that is. Almost unanimously, theyre ripping a movie 16 years in the making. In this engaging drama of a middle-class Cuban family crumbling during free Havanas last days, which he both directs and stars in, Garcia insisted on depicting some historical truth about Cuba a grotesque and unforgivable blunder in his industry. Hes now paying the price.
Earlier, many film festivals refused to screen it. Now many Latin American countries refuse to show it. The film's offenses are many and varied. Most unforgivable of all, Che Guevara is shown killing people in cold blood. Who ever heard of such nonsense? And just where does this uppity Andy Garcia get the effrontery to portray such things? The man obviously doesn't know his place.
And just where did Garcia get this preposterous notion of pre-Castro Cuba as a relatively prosperous but politically troubled place, they ask. All the Cubans he portrays seem middle class. Where in his movie is the tsunami of stooped and starving peasants that carried Fidel and Che into Havana on its crest, they ask. Where are all those diseased and illiterate laborers and peasants my professors, Dan Rather, CNN and Oliver Stone told me about, ask the critics.
Garcia that cinematic bomb-thrower has seriously jolted the mainstream medias fantasies and hallucinations of pre-Castro Cuba, of Che, of Fidel, and of Cubans in general. In consequence, the critics are unnerved and disoriented. Their annoyance and scorn are spewing forth in review after review.
Garcia blew it. If only his characters had spoken with accents like John Belushis as a Saturday Night Live killer bee! If only theyd dressed like The Three Amigos! If only theyd behaved like Cheech and Chong! If only they'd mimicked the mannerisms and gait of Freddie Prinze in Chico and the Man! If only the women had piled a roadside fruit stand on their head like Carmen Miranda in Road to Rio! If only the cast had looked like the little guy who handles my luggage when I visit Cancun! Or the guys who do my lawn! Everybody knows thats what Hispanics look like!
If only masses of Cubans had been shown toiling in salt mines like Spartacus, or picking crops like Tom Joad, or getting lashed by a vicious landlord like Kunta Kinte, or hustling for a living like Ratso Rizzo! In a movie about the Cuban revolution, we almost never see any of the working poor for whom the revolution was supposedly fought, sniffs Peter Reiner in The Christian Science Monitor. The Lost City misses historical complexity.
Actually, what's missing is Mr. Reiners historical knowledge. Andy Garcia and screenwriter Guillermo Cabrera Infante knew full well that the working poor had no role in the stage of the Cuban revolution shown in the movie. The anti-Batista rebellion was led and staffed overwhelmingly by Cubas middle and, especially, upper class. To wit: In August of 1957 Castros rebel movement called for a national strike against the Batista dictatorship and threatened to shoot workers who reported to work. The national strike was completely ignored.
Another was called for April 9, 1958. And again Cuban workers blew a loud and collective raspberry at their liberators, reporting to work en masse. Garcias tale bemoans the loss of easy wealth for a precious few, harrumphs Michael Atkinson in The Village Voice. Poor people are absolutely absent; Garcia and Infante seem to have thought that peasant revolutions happen for no particular reason or at least no reason the moneyed 1 percent should have to worry about.
Whats absolutely absent is Mr. Atkinsons knowledge about the Cuba Garcia depicts in his movie. His crack about that moneyed 1 percent and especially his peasant revolution epitomize the cliched idiocies still parroted by the chattering classes about Cuba. The impoverished masses of Cubans who embraced Castro as a liberator appear only in grainy, black-and-white news clips, snorts Stephen Holden in The New York Times. Political dialogue in the film is strictly of the junior high school variety.
Its Holdens education on the Cuban Revolution thats of the junior high school variety. Actually its Harvard Graduate School variety. Many more imbecilities about Cuba are heard in Ivy League classrooms than in any rural junior high school. It fails to focus on the poverty-stricken workers whose plight lit the fires of revolution, complains Rex Reed in the New York Observer.
Youre better off attempting rational discourse with the Flat-Earth Society, but nonetheless Ill try to dispel the fantasies of pre-Castro Cuba still cherished by Americas most prestigious academics and its most learned film critics. Ill even stay away from those crackpots and hotheads in Miami. In place of those insufferable revanchists and hard-liners Ill use a source generally esteemed by liberal highbrow types: the United Nations.
Here's a UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) report on Cuba circa 1957: One feature of the Cuban social structure is a large middle class, it starts. Cuban workers are more unionized (proportional to the population) than U.S. workers. The average wage for an 8-hour day in Cuba in 1957 is higher than for workers in Belgium, Denmark, France and Germany. Cuban labor receives 66.6 per cent of gross national income. In the U.S. the figure is 70 per cent, in Switzerland 64 per cent. 44 per cent of Cubans are covered by social legislation, a higher percentage than in the U.S.
In 1958 Cuba had a higher per-capita income than Austria and Japan. Cuban industrial workers had the eighth-highest wages in the world. In the 1950s Cuban stevedores earned more per hour than their counterparts in New Orleans and San Francisco. Cuba had established an eight-hour workday in 1933 five years before FDRs New Dealers got around to it. Add to this a one-month paid vacation. The much-lauded (by liberals) social democracies of Western Europe didnt manage this till 30 years later.
And get this, Maxine Waters, Barbara Walters, Andrea Mitchell, Diane Sawyer and the rest of you feminist Castro groupies: Cuban women got three months of paid maternity leave. I repeat, this was in the 1930s. Cuba, a country 71 percent white in 1957, was completely desegregated 30 years before Rosa Parks was dragged off that Birmingham bus and handcuffed.
In 1958 Cuba had more female college graduates per capita than the U.S. The anti-Batista rebellion (not revolution) was staffed and led overwhelmingly by college students and professionals. Unemployed lawyers were prominent (take Fidel Castro himself).
Heres the makeup of the peasant revolutions first Cabinet, drawn from the leaders in the anti-Batista fight: seven lawyers, two university professors, three university students, one doctor, one engineer, one architect, one former city mayor and a colonel who defected from the Batista army. A notoriously bourgeois bunch, as Che himself might have put it.
By 1961, however, workers and campesinos (country folk) made up the overwhelming bulk of the anti-Castroite rebels, especially the guerrillas in the Escambray mountains. And boy, would THAT rebellion make for an action-packed and gut-wrenching movie! If by some miracle it ever got made, you can bet these learned critics would pan it too. Who ever heard of poor country folk fighting against their benefactors Fidel and Che?
The New York Times Stephen Holden also sneers at Garcias implication that life sure was peachy before Fidel Castro came to town and ruined everything. In fact, Mr. Holden, before Castro came to town, Cuba took in more immigrants (primarily from Europe) as a percentage of population than the U.S. And more Americans lived in Cuba than Cubans in the U.S. Furthermore, inner tubes were used in truck tires, oil drums for oil, and Styrofoam for insulation.
None were cherished black market items for use as flotation devices to flee the glorious liberation while fighting off hammerheads and tiger sharks. The learned Mr. Holden is also annoyed by buffoonish parodies of sour Communist apparatchiks barking orders.
Apparently, Communist apparatchiks should be properly depicted as somewhat misguided social workers, or as slightly overzealous Howard Dean campaign staffers. It's no parody, Mr. Holden, that the apparatchiks Garcia depicts in his movie incarcerated and executed a higher percentage of their countrymen in their first three months in power than Hitler and his apparatchiks jailed and executed in their first three years. As well complain that the guards and police in Schindlers List, Julia or The Diary of Anne Frank come across as hackneyed caricatures.
Instead lets portray them with more complexity, as misguided idealists who followed a leader who unshackled the German working class from its subservience to snooty barons, who eradicated Germanys unemployment and who ended Germanys national humiliation at the hands of Europes premier imperialist powers.
Andy Garcia shows it precisely right. In 1958 Cuba was undergoing a rebellion, not a revolution. Cubans expected political change, not a socioeconomic cataclysm and catastrophe. But I fully realize such distinctions are much too complex for a film critic to grasp. They prefer boneheaded cliches. Garcia might have followed the laudable examples of historical complexity and accuracy shown in previous movies on Cuba. Take two that these critics compare (favorably) to The Lost City, Havana and Godfather II.
In Havana, the brilliant director Sydney Pollack casts Fulgencio Batista with blond hair and blue eyes. In fact Batista was a black. In Godfather II, Francis Ford Coppola, to show Havana streets on New Years Eve 1958, casts more people than marched in Los Angeles last week and depicts them in a battle scene right out of Braveheart. In fact, Havana streets were deathly quiet that night.
I dont presume to the exalted position of a film critic. So I dont comment on the dramatic and cinematic criticisms made by these august critics. Im not saying, or even implying, that The Lost City is a better movie than Godfather II. I'm simply criticizing the critics on their criticism of the historical accuracy of The Lost City. In these reviews we see in all its classic splendor the mainstream medias thundering and apparently incurable stupidity on matters Cuban.
Humberto Fontova is the author of Fidel: Hollywoods Favorite Tyrant, described as absolutely devastating. An enlightening read you'll never forget by David Limbaugh. David Horowitz says: Humberto has performed a valuable service to the cause of decency and human freedom. Every American should read this book.
E.U. EUROPEAN UNION
EE.UU. OR U.S.A. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Just as I thought. Thanks.
IT IS BEING EXHIBITED IN HOUSTON AT THE RIVERS OKAS THEATER AT 11 AM, 2PM 5, AND 8 PM. AND IT HAS BEEN A SOLD OUT IN ALL THE EXHIBITS.
I saw the movie last night, and if it doesn't get Best Picture and Best Actor for Garcia, there is no justice. Bill Murray was also excellent in his role.
And it definately didn't paint Batista in a positive light, either.
I cannot recommend this film highly enough.
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