GPJA Free Ticket To Motorcycle Diaries
GPJA Free Ticket To Motorcycle Diaries
If you buy a $15 ticket to one of these two nights of Cuban films you will also receive a free ticket to Motorcycle Diaries - a hit film about Che Guevara's travel through Latin America before joining Fidel Castro's for an even more eventful trip to Cuba. The films below show on August 17 and 24. To guarantee seats you need to pre-order by emailing miket@pl.net TWO NIGHTS OF CUBAN CULT CLASSICS (Profits go to bring acclaimed Cuban director Fernando Perez to NZ for the NZ/Cuba Film Exchange)
Tuesday 17 August 6-10pm
CLANDESTINES (Underground) This classic Cuban film centres on a love affair between two youth, and their struggle in the urban underground movement against dictator Fulgencio Batista in the late 1950s. Suspenseful and inspiring, it portrays the heroism of the Cuban youth and their sacrifices that brought the Revolution to fruition. 1987, 103 min, Colour. Directed by Fernando Perez SE PERMUTA (House for swap) Gloria (Rosita Fornes) is a feisty middle-aged woman determined to get a place to live in the very trying, overcrowded city. Her task is made all the more difficult by her daughter Yolanda (Isabel Santos) who keeps changing plans about where she wants to live.
Trying to fit in with Yolanda's rolercoaster romantic life its not long before Gloria has so many housing balls juggling in the air that it is certain they are all going to fall down with a crash. First-time Director Juan Carlos Tabió. (NR, 98 minutes) 1983
Tuesday 24 August 6-10pm
UN HOMBRE DE EXITO ( A Successful Man ) A Successful Man An epic chronicle of thirty years of Cuban politics and history, A Successful Man has been compared to The Godfather for its lavish period re-creation. The tale begins in the thirties with the brothers in school and the future full of promise.
This is a story of corruption versus innocence and purity of right is blessed with Solás' meticulous attention to detail. Directed by Humberto Solás, 1986.
LA BELLA DEL ALAMBRA Cuba in the twenties. Rachel works as a chorus girl in a low establishment where the boundaries are blurred between artistic performance, prostitution, fun and exploitation. The film, a cross between a musical and a melodrama, is a good example of Creole culture and folklore.
Thanks to Mario and Gonzalo Romeu's music it received an Academy nomination for «Best Foreign Picture». Directed by Enrique Pineda Barnet, 1989
Kodak Theatre, Napier St, Freeman's Bay $10 each or $15 for two films - buy drinks at the bar Put on by the Cuba Friendship Society and Supported by the Screen Directors Guild NZ
LIMITED SEATING - ORDER TICKETS FROM miket@pl.net