Cuba libre
"CUBA-LIBRE" an improbable potion that provokes politically incorrect delusions and libertarian hallucinations. This could be the description of the first solo full-length film from the versatile Raim…
Cuba libre
"CUBA-LIBRE" an improbable potion that provokes politically incorrect delusions and libertarian hallucinations. This could be the description of the first solo full-length film from the versatile Raimundo GarcÃa. A movie with the name of an alcoholic beverage as its title has humor as its only refreshment. A rowdy movie where political criticism doesn't leave you with an ideological hangover but rather the healthy smile of an intelligent story that touches serious topics like the lack of freedom in the contemporary world. This is CUBA-LIBRE. A Molotov cocktail: Utopian anti-establishment anarchist squatters, an old radical Republican in a wheelchair, nostalgic communists of the old Cuba battling others who dream of uniting with those who uphold the embargo, police with paternal leanings, indiscriminant riot squads and a free press operating in a democratic country whose motto is that the truth should never get in the way of a good piece of news. Meanwhile, a distant Fidel Castro plays the part of Orwell's Big Brother in this great urban farce that makes one laugh and think.
Cuba libre
Comedy
Film Details
"CUBA-LIBRE" an improbable potion that provokes politically incorrect delusions and libertarian hallucinations. This could be the description of the first solo full-length film from the versatile Raimundo GarcÃa. A movie with the name of an alcoholic beverage as its title has humor as its only refreshment.
A rowdy movie where political criticism doesn't leave you with an ideological hangover but rather the healthy smile of an intelligent story that touches serious topics like the lack of freedom in the contemporary world. This is CUBA-LIBRE. A Molotov cocktail: Utopian anti-establishment anarchist squatters, an old radical Republican in a wheelchair, nostalgic communists of the old Cuba battling others who dream of uniting with those who uphold the embargo, police with paternal leanings, indiscriminant riot squads and a free press operating in a democratic country whose motto is that the truth should never get in the way of a good piece of news.
Meanwhile, a distant Fidel Castro plays the part of Orwell's Big Brother in this great urban farce that makes one laugh and think..