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Up to a Certain Point
Tomás Gutiérrez Alea | Cuba | 1983 | 72 min.
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Sexual politics is the theme of this introspective comedy. While researching a film project on Cuban machismo, Oscar, a married, middle-aged Cuban screenwriter, meets Lina, an independent young dockworker. Their ensuing romance is reminiscent of Memories of Underdevelopment, further dissecting the questions of liberation and bourgeois intellectualism.
Shown at the 1995 Human Rights Watch Festival. Distributed by New Yorker Films, 16 W. 61st Street, 11th floor, New York, NY 10023, Tel: (212) 247-6110 Fax: (212) 307-7855.
Tomás Gutiérrez Alea
(Second from left) The foremost director in Cuba today, Gutiérrez Alea is known for his satirical critiques of government bureaucracy from "inside" the Revolution. Unwavering in his commitment to Cuba's Marxist Revolution, Gutiérrez Alea has been criticized abroad for being apolitical and for not taking on Castro's policies more fully. Gutiérrez Alea states that he agrees "with the Revolution. I'm not going to question it because I'm not interested in doing that. Now, within the Revolution there are things that I know can be improved, that are not right, and I'm interested in revealing these things."It is the struggle within the Revolution that gives Gutiérrez Alea the inspiration for his films.
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