I Am Cuba

Started by bonanzataz, June 11, 2003, 02:34:34 PM

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

AlguienEstolamiPantalones

the look on tom cruises face when she pretty much just rips out the bullshit from underneith him

does it get better then that, and you need a tom cruise to pull that off

thats why pta is so great with big stars, he knows the baggage they bring and he knows how to use it

ive said it before but burt is jack horner, so much of what burt is about jack is about

and mark and dirk, mark at that point had a lot to prove and he had the stuff , but nobody wanted to give him a chance because he was fucking marky mark

to this day snobs ignore him, even though he was the fucking star of the film

im sorry scottie was the most expendable member of the cast, yet snobs go on and on

maybe its because they see themselves in taht character

bonanzataz

tom cruise's best performance, yes. robards is dead? autofocus blows and i couldn't find one thing that redeemed that movie. screw you godardian for being here for only a month and having more posts than i do even though i've been here since the day this website opened!

back to i am cuba. i didn't make this thread as a testament to how great magnolia is. go to the paul section for that!


yes, it's true, sarcasm on the internet don't work. just to let you all know this post was meant as a lighthearted jab. i'm not being a dick, really.
The corpses all hang headless and limp bodies with no surprises and the blood drains down like devil's rain we'll bathe tonight I want your skulls I need your skulls I want your skulls I need your skulls Demon I am and face I peel to see your skin turned inside out, 'cause gotta have you on my wall gotta have you on my wall, 'cause I want your skulls I need your skulls I want your skulls I need your skulls collect the heads of little girls and put 'em on my wall hack the heads off little girls and put 'em on my wall I want your skulls I need your skulls I want your skulls I need your skulls

SoNowThen

It's all good.

Yeah, sadly, Robards passed on a while ago.
Those who say that the totalitarian state of the Soviet Union was not "real" Marxism also cannot admit that one simple feature of Marxism makes totalitarianism necessary:  the rejection of civil society. Since civil society is the sphere of private activity, its abolition and replacement by political society means that nothing private remains. That is already the essence of totalitarianism; and the moralistic practice of the trendy Left, which regards everything as political and sometimes reveals its hostility to free speech, does nothing to contradict this implication.

When those who hated capital and consumption (and Jews) in the 20th century murdered some hundred million people, and the poster children for the struggle against international capitalism and America are now fanatical Islamic terrorists, this puts recent enthusiasts in an awkward position. Most of them are too dense and shameless to appreciate it, and far too many are taken in by the moralistic and paternalistic rhetoric of the Left.

AlguienEstolamiPantalones

Quote from: SoNowThenIt's all good.

Yeah, sadly, Robards passed on a while ago.

WHAT WHY AM I NOW FINDING THIS OUT FIRST KUBRICK THEN AKIRA THEN COBAIN .......... :: slips into a spanish accent:: This is some heavy shit mang !!

AlguienEstolamiPantalones

here this may help


The supreme masterpiece
of the poetic documentary form


BY GARY MORRIS

Three recent views of Cuba: the repressive, fragmented, poverty-stricken last gasp of modern Communism offered by the U.S. media; the wonderland of repudiated gay and "counter-revolutionary" culture in movies like Strawberry and Chocolate, a 1993 feature film set in pre-Mariel 1979; and the glittering pleasures — social and spiritual — of the reclaimed island shown by what is surely the supreme masterpiece of the poetic documentary form, Mihail Kalatozov's 1964 Russian-Cuban coproduction I Am Cuba.

This unforgettable reconstruction of the life of the island, from the jazzy rhythms of the decadent Batista era to the heroics of the Revolution and its aftermath, recalls the work of Leni Riefenstahl and Eisenstein in its transformation of agitprop into art. The Eisenstein connection is no accident — the Russian team that created I Am Cuba were attempting the same kind of aesthetic treatment of history as Eisenstein, and they worked with some of his collaborators. But the filmmakers of I Am Cuba differed from their mentors in perhaps the most fundamental aspect — the visual. Whereas Eisenstein used cutting and dynamic composition in films like Potemkin, Kalatozov and his visual collaborators use a moving camera — a handheld Eclair — to bring their story to scintillating life.

The first draft of I Am Cuba was a scene-by-scene re-creation of the Cuban revolution. Kalatozov and his screenwriter, the poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko, wisely scrapped this in favor of a more aesthetic approach. The finished film divides roughly into five episodes that chronicle the island's recent colonialist and revolutionary periods.



The first is a look at Batista's Cuba, with settings in nightclubs and palatial hotels overrun by American businessmen and the submissive workers, singers, and prostitutes they exploit. This sequence contains the film's most famous shot where the camera starts atop a high-rise, where a group of musicians and bikini-clad women perform, then descends down the side of the building to a crowded swimming pool and finally — without a cut — underwater, where it follows the movements of the swimmers.

According to the press notes, the filmmakers "had to make a watertight box out of sheets of Dupont plastic with three handles so the camera could be passed between Urusevsky and Calzatti [cameramen] at crucial moments. On the first take, the camera box refused to dive beneath the water surface, and Calzatti had to adapt the box with a hollow steel tube running through it so the air could escape the box, but no water would enter the camera."

This sequence, which in its overwhelming power makes mincemeat of most such bravura camerawork in films like Citizen Kane, is also notable for its portrayal of the creepy, unattractive Americans who exercise their "manifest destiny" in the crudest ways imaginable against the desperate inhabitants of the sugar-cane—rich island. In an alarming scene, a beautiful young woman named Maria is shoved from one man to another across a dance floor. The camera follows her unwilling movements in radical jerks, perfectly visualizing the loss of control she — and by inference the island — is experiencing under U.S. domination.

The visual pyrotechnics continue throughout the film. The second major episode, about a peasant family whose meager living as sugar cane cutters is brutally ended by a coopted native landowner and the United Fruit Company, has an elaborate scene in which the grief-stricken father burns down the cane fields. The filmmakers devised a closed-camera video system that let them view this complicated, crane-shot sequence while it was being filmed.

The unforgettable images of the old man cutting what appears to be luminous sugar cane against a black sky point up another of I Am Cuba's breakthroughs — the use of infrared film to obtain jaw-dropping levels of black-and-white contrast. These shots, featuring ordinary people played by amateur actors, emphasize the dazzling primacy of the land over those who briefly inhabit it, and reflect the filmmakers' idea that complex characterization must be subjugated to the struggle by "real people" to maintain the land against corrupt influences.

Later sequences detail with equal power the rise of the worker and student movements, and the physical conflicts — particularly the disastrous invasion of the Moncada army barracks — that culminated in the overthrow of Batista and the destruction of U.S. "interests" in the island.

The soundtrack of I Am Cuba features a female narrator who ties together the episodes with Yevtushenko's poetry, which plays on Cuba's split identity: "Don't avert your eyes. Look! I am Cuba. For you, I am the casino, the bar, hotels and brothels. But the hands of these children and old people are also me." The music in the film continues this motif; peasant folk tunes and African rhythms compete with raucous early '60s rock tunes, "exotic" jazz, and nightclub ballads ("Amor Loca").

In spite of its extraordinary power, the film was denounced by Cuban authorities as counterrevolutionary and — in a fit of revolutionary bitchiness — informally dubbed "I Am NOT Cuba"! The kind of "pure art" approach represented by the film has always been problematic to the Marxist mentality, but I Am Cuba is truly revolutionary in every sense.

edison

Quote from: AlguienEstolamiPantalones
Quote from: SoNowThenIt's all good.

Yeah, sadly, Robards passed on a while ago.

WHAT WHY AM I NOW FINDING THIS OUT FIRST KUBRICK THEN AKIRA THEN COBAIN


This is the worst day of my life so far

Gold Trumpet

I really want to see this movie. I loved the previous movie made by the director, The Cranes are Flying, but word of mouth for me on this film is that the movie really is amazing for its shots, and not story and is somewhat propagandistic given the status of mother russia at the time. The Cranes are Flying was very nationalistic, but still held strong due to its story and ability of the filmmaking to capture that. All the gloss that can be in filmmaking don't really add up to shit. Just look at the embarassment that there is trying to capture a story with Eisenstein's sound films. I can't help but feel that those films should be given nothing but little respect. Yes, he did things for editing, but examples of his editing can be found in many other movies that were able to have a strong story to them. "Silly" is a nice word for Eisenstein's stories. Magnolia had a great story. The filmmaking was to complement that.

~rougerum

godardian

Quote from: The Gold TrumpetI really want to see this movie. I loved the previous movie made by the director, The Cranes are Flying,

~rougerum

Cranes are Flying really piqued my interest- it's a wonderful movie- and the Boogie Nights connection clinched it. I shelled out the money for it.
""Money doesn't come into it. It never has. I do what I do because it's all that I am." - Morrissey

"Lacan stressed more and more in his work the power and organizing principle of the symbolic, understood as the networks, social, cultural, and linguistic, into which a child is born. These precede the birth of a child, which is why Lacan can say that language is there from before the actual moment of birth. It is there in the social structures which are at play in the family and, of course, in the ideals, goals, and histories of the parents. This world of language can hardly be grasped by the newborn and yet it will act on the whole of the child's existence."

Stay informed on protecting your freedom of speech and civil rights.

Gamblour.

Like most, I heard about this first on the Boogie Nights commentary. I don't think I normally like political movies, but I guess because this is more historical (today, obviously). The parallel stories and the tragedy involved, too fucking cool.
WWPTAD?