In Collection
#64
Seen It:
Yes
Drama
USA - República Dominicana / Spanish
| René Lavan |
Gustavo |
| Mayte Vilán |
Yolanda |
| Miguel Gutiérrez |
Dr. Tomás Valdez |
| Larry Villanueva |
Bobby |
| Luis Celeiro |
Mr. García |
| Teresa Maria Rojas |
Belkis |
| Orestes Matacena |
Claudio |
| Caridad Ravelo |
Soraya |
| Jorge Pupo |
Yiyo |
| Victor Checo |
Yolanda's Father |
| Miguel Gutierrez |
|
| Rene Lavan |
|
| Mayte Vilan |
|
| Director |
Leon Ichaso |
| Producer |
Leon Ichaso; Jaime Pina |
| Writer |
Pelayo García; Leon Ichaso; Orestes Matacena |
In what may be the angriest portrait of Cuba ever made, director Leon Ichaso (
Crossover Dreams) charts the journey of one young man from patriot to disillusioned dropout to angry rebel. Gustavo (René Lavan) is an idealistic young Marxist scholar who dreams of attending the University of Prague. When he falls for an earthy dancer with a more pragmatic view of her homeland, who plans to escape to Florida, his ideals are systematically chipped away in the face of poverty, repression, corruption, and police brutality until it all becomes too much for him to bear. A far cry from the more romantic work of Tomás Gutiérrez Alea (
Strawberry and Chocolate), this film speaks volumes about a generation of exiles burning with anger and hate for Castro and his regime. It's also manipulative and heavy-handed, with Gustavo less a hero than a straw figure poised for a fall, and it's far less revealing than such self-critical Cuban features as
Portrait of Teresa and
Memories of Underdevelopment. But its vivid and passionate feelings of betrayal can hardly be dismissed. Ichaso shot portions of the film in Cuba and smuggled the footage out, but Santo Domingo doubles for Havana through the bulk of the feature.
--Sean Axmaker
| Barcode |
717119646042 |
| Region |
Region 1 |
| Chapters |
15 |
| Release Date |
2001 |
| Packaging |
Keep Case |
| Screen Ratio |
Standard 1.33:1 B&W |
| Subtitles |
English |
| Audio Tracks |
SPANISH: Dolby Digital Stereo |
| Layers |
Single Side, Single Layer |
| Nr of Disks/Tapes |
1 |
|
|
http://www.austinchronicle.com/gbase/Calendar/Film?Film=142465
Bitter Sugar
Directed By: Leon Ichaso
Starring: René Lavan, Mayte Vilán, Miguel Guitiérrez, Larry Villanueva, Luis Celeiro, Teresa María Rojas, Orestes Matacena
(NR, 92 min.)
Gustavo (Lavan of TV's One Life to Live) is the portrait of Cuba's “new man.” This young believer in the Revolution is a recent graduate of Havana's prestigious Lenin School who has been promised a government scholarship to study aeronautical engineering at the University of Prague (even though Gustavo's new Cuba holds out dim prospects for employment in this line of work). But as the events of the film unfold, Gustavo's bright dreams for his future (in which he believes he can achieve anything he wants) steadily crumble, and we watch as this upholder of the Revolution becomes a disillusioned would-be assassin of Castro. Bitter Sugar is a dramatic amalgam of true stories about life in modern-day Cuba, a place where material deprivation and ideological intolerance have created such a dissatisfied and restive population that the only happy citizen remaining on the island is Gustavo. There's an inescapable political agenda underlying Bitter Sugar that rules the film's dramatic progression and enfeebles its naturalistic flavor, making Gustavo's final transformation seem too forced and abrupt. Yet there's also an engaging likeability in this anti-Castro drama's mix of passion and politics. Bitter Sugar was shot in Santo Domingo with a cast of Cuban-American émigré actors, an appealing bunch who manage to locate and convey the humanity in each of their characters. Anchoring the movie is a timeless love story in which the handsome Gustavo falls for the lovely young dancer Yolanda (Vilán), an attraction so strong that it overrides their political opposition. Yet conditions force everyone in Gustavo's Cuba into moral compromises: Yolanda becomes a bar girl; Gustavo's father (Guitiérrez) quits his psychiatric practice to become a pianist in a tourist hotel bar where in one night he earns more in tips than he did in one month as a doctor; Gustavo's brother Bobby (Villanueva) is a rockero in a heavy metal band, who is tortured by the police when he protests the confiscation of his equipment and later injects himself with HIV-infected blood to further protest the government (a form of protest based on actual occurrences). There is also a stunning handsomeness to the black-and-white images (filmed by Dominican cinematographer Claudio Chea) of director and co-screenwriter Leon Ichaso (Crossover Dreams, Sugar Hill). Yet, the axe that grinds this Bitter Sugar chops its enticing raw product into uncomfortably prearranged cubes.
Marjorie Baumgarten [1997-06-06]
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http://www.spiritualityhealth.com/newsh/items/moviereview/item_4739.html
Movie Review
by Frederic Brussat
Bitter Sugar
Leon Ichaso
New Yorker Video 02/96 VHS/DVD
Not Rated
Bitter Sugar presents a fascinating portrait of contemporary Cuba as a country of shattered dreams and unfulfilled promises.
Despite the widespread unemployment in Havana, Gustavo, a student who has just won a scholarship to study at the University of Prague, still believes in the ideals of Fidel Castro's socialist revolution. However, his father, a psychiatrist, gives up his vocation in order to earn more money playing piano in a hotel frequented by tourists. And Gustavo's brother Bobby, a rock musician, injects himself with the AIDS virus as a political act of protest against the repression of the ruling regime.
This strikingly photographed Cuban black-and-white film by writer and director Leon Ichaso charts the love affair between Gustavo and Yolanda, a fun-loving and free-spirited girl whose mother doesn't approve of his politics. With its surprising finale, Bitter Sugar vividly conveys the spiritual dimension of politics and how the yearning for freedom is the heartbeat of humanity.