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50 Years of the Cuban Revolution in July

12 June 2009

Modern Cuban cinema – borne out of a revolution that took place 50 years ago – is celebrating its golden jubilee this year. To mark the occasion, Mr. Bongo Films is releasing a box set of landmark films from this iconic and turbulent nation.

Cuban cinema is vibrant and exciting and yet not as widely known as films from other countries – but all that is set to change with the release of 50 Years Of The Cuban Revolution, an impressive-looking box set featuring four outstanding films, including the never before released on DVD Lucia along with I Am Cuba, Memories Of Underdevelopment and Strawberry & Chocolate, on 13 July 2009. The Barbican cinema is also hosting the 2nd Cine Cuba from 3 to 9 July.

Shocking, moving, and above all groundbreaking, these four films are the work of esteemed directors, Humberto Solas, Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, Juan Carlos Tabio and Mikhail Kalatzov and tell outsiders what it means to be Cuban, past, present and future.

Described by Times Out as "The finest film to come out of Cuba in the '60s," Lucia tells three stories of three periods of Cuban history, from the vantage point of three women, each called Lucia. Directed by the world famous Humberto Solas (Manuela, Simparele) this tri-partite feature melds Cuban revolutionary fervour with feminist and social politics and was the film that catapulted Solas into the international spotlight. Focusing on the plight of women from different classes in Cuba's history, Lucia is a pioneering piece of Latin American cinema that highlights the plight and contribution of women in Cuba's revolutionary history.

Banned in the United States during the Cold War and yet now one of the most highly regarded and influential films of the second half of the 20th Century, Soviet director Mikhail Kalatzov's I Am Cuba (Soy Cuba) is a paean to the Communist revolution that wears its heart on its sleeve but is nonetheless a stunning piece of filmmaking that has shaped the work of any number of modern directors, including Paul Thomas Anderson and Martin Scorsese. Set during the dying days of the Batista regime, I Am Cuba's four vignettes show the societal ills that led to the revolution as well as the call to arms that transcended social and economic barriers. From a young woman forced into prostitution and a tenant farmer who loses his livelihood, to students taking to the streets in defiance and peasants taking up arms, I Am Cuba throbs with frustration and anger.

Hailed as one of the most sophisticated film ever to come out of Cuba in the early days of Castro's revolution, Memories Of Underdevelopment (Memorias Del Subdesarollo) is visionary Cuban director Tomás Gutiérrez Alea's tour de force. Through a moving blend of narrative fiction, still photography and rare documentary footage, Alea catalogues the intricacies of the early days of the Castro regime; producing a stirring and enigmatic work that feeds from the culture of the very subject it is studying; Cuba.

Groundbreaking and widely celebrated for numerous reasons, Juan Carlos Tabio's Strawberry & Chocolate (Fresa Y Chocolate) was the first Cuban film ever to receive an Academy Award nomination, thanks to its revelatory plot, masterful direction and phenomenally crafted performances. An exploration into the seduction of the mind, Strawberry & Chocolate shows how politics can shape lives, opinions and relationships. Hugely controversial in Cuba even now, the film was the first to feature a gay man as the hero while openly criticising the Government and its widespread intolerance. Castro's Cuba has continued to support its artists throughout the years, and yet all they all retain their spirit of independence. They do not kowtow to the authorities that support them, and remain fiercely independent from – and often critical of - the Government.

50 Years of the Cuban Revolution will be released on 13th July 2009 by Mr. Bongo Films at the RRP of £24.99.

Also marking the 50th Anniversary of the Cuban Revolution is a season of films running at the Barbican in London, details below.

Friday 3 July
7.00pm - OPENING GALA: Personal Belongings (Cuba 2008 Dir. Alejandro Brugués)

Friday 3 to Thursday 9 July
8.45pm daily - Strawberry and Chocolate (18) (Cuba 1993 Dir. Tomás Gutiérrez Alea)

Saturday 4 July
2.00pm - Life is to Whistle (La Vida es Silbar) (12*) (Cuba/Spain 1999 Dir. Fernando Pérez)
4.30pm - Suite Havana (PG*) (Cuba 2003 Dir. Fernando Pérez)
6.30pm – The Horn Of Plenty (El Cuerno de la Abundancia) (Cuba 2008 Dir. Juan Carlos Tabio)

Sunday 5 July
2.30pm - Cecilia (18) (Cuba 1982 Dir. Humberto Solás)
5.00pm - Titón de la Habana a Guantanamera (PG*) (Cuba 2008 Dir. Mirta Ibarra)
6.30pm - Guantanamera (15) (Cuba 1995 Dir. Tomás Gutierréz Alea)

Monday 6 July
6.30pm - Documentary Showcase

Wednesday 8 July
6.30pm - Up to a Certain Point (Hasta Cierta Punto) (Cuba 1984 Dir. Tomás Gutiérrez Alea)

Thursday 9 July
6.30pm - Omertà (12*) (Cuba 2008 Dir. Pavel Giroud)