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October 14, 2022
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Vicenta at the stake of our days

OnCubaNews

In art, as in life, generalizations are risky. They simplify, blur, often hide the essential. Thus, it is rash to say that such a novel is that of the Mexican Revolution, that more than any play explains a social movement as elusive as Peronism, or that bolero summarizes the sentimental position of the Latin lover.

Thus, it is inaccurate, incomplete, to state that Vicenta B.the most recent work by Carlos Lechuga (Havana, 1983), is the film of Cuban disenchantment at this time.

Vicenta, who practices divination through the complex of beliefs of Afro-Cuban religious syncretism, sees the family disintegrate. She lost her marriage because, in the opinion of her ex, she lavished herself on the mission of providing “light” to others so that they could find a good development, and she did not take care of the home, understood as the sum of closest affections. He, she says in a speech, was there, but she couldn’t see him.

Linett Hernández Valdés in the character of “Vicenta B”. Photo: courtesy of production.

Now, at the time of the narrative, which is set in 2017, his only son, Carlitos,1 leaves the country. He is part of the incessant stream of young people who leave the archipelago with the hope of finding a better destination that will allow them, at the same time, to satisfy their expectations of economic improvement and help relatives who have been left behind in precarious conditions.two Vicenta did not foresee this; she couldn’t twist fate’s arm either with her arts. The result of her: she has been left speechless, in the middle of her magical universe. And he begins to lose faith in what he thought was the reason for his life, which is to say losing his strength, his ability to anticipate events, to dialogue with the beings, now sullen, now magnanimous, that populate that area, between sleep and wakefulness, which is your world.

Vicenta at the stake of our days
Linett Hernández Valdés in the character of “Vicenta B”. Photo: courtesy of production.

For more ardor, our character errs the prediction that a young woman has requested. Vicenta tells him that everything is fine, that there are good days and bad days, but that in essence the letters do not reveal greater evils. The girl commits suicide, and that immense weight of her falls on her shoulders to sink her deeper into her pain and despair.

So far what we will advance of the plot. The film, which has not yet had its commercial release, has had a good tour of international festivals. So far it has been seen in Toronto, San Sebastián, Biarritz, Ceará and Goa; tomorrow, October 15, you will have your pass at the Chicago International Film Festival.

More than archetypes, Vicenta B. introduces characters. It is a work in an intimate key that, in my opinion, does not intend to develop thesis or enunciate ideological discourses. They are beings in their circumstances. And those circumstances correspond to those of a good part of the population of the country in crisis that is Cuba. There is no picturesqueness or folkloric breath. Those who are amazed that, due to its rhythm in the montage, the sober style of the performances or the lack of “beauty” in the photography, it does not look like a Cuban film, start from assuming a stereotype of the national that good art tends to deny. and again.

Vicenta at the stake of our days
Linett Hernández Valdés in the character of “Vicenta B”. Photo: courtesy of production.

The old man who simulates an illness is just that, an old man who pretends. Tata, Vicenta’s godmother, is, like herself, a fallible being, who confesses that more than once she has been plunged into discouragement. Carlos, the ex, is shown as a sad man who, apparently, still has feelings for Vicenta, despite the fact that he has rebuilt her life…

At a time of such political sensitivity, it is easy for possible readings of the film to run amok down the channel of the allegorical. And the thing is that Cuba’s hardship is such at this moment, the social environment so tense, that everything alludes to it; any gesture, any image, any phrase seems loaded with political meaning.

Vicenta B (2022) is the third fiction feature film by Carlos Lechuga. precede it Molasses (2012) and the controversy Santa and Andrew (2016), not yet released in Cuba.

Vicenta at the stake of our days
Cuban filmmaker Carlos Lechuga. Photo taken from the internet.

Vicenta… it is a suggestive, well-cared piece that says a lot with very few resources. In it, the performance of Linnett Hernández Valdés, in the leading character, the photography of Denise Guerra and the edition of Joanna Montero stand out; the production was carried out by Claudia Calviño.

His story may seem local but it has all the empathic elements that ensure universal reach, since it speaks of recognizable human conflicts that concern us all. It is not the film of Cuban disenchantment, but a Cuban film about disenchanted beings.

Brand Carlos Lettuce with Vicenta… a breakthrough point in his career. Since it is not a complacent cinema or one that is expressly politically aligned, it will also be controversial. But art is there for that, among other things: to plunge our hands into reality, to tear up the shadows, to show us in all our contradictory complexity, to nourish with beauty —and Vicenta B. it is a depository film of a great load of unconventional beauty—the bonfire of days.

***

Grades:

1 The name corresponds to that of the director, who also had a fortune teller grandmother.

two According to data of the Center for Democracy of the Americas (CDA), around 178,000 Cubans have arrived in the United States so far in 2022. The figure exceeds the sum of emigrants to this country during the exodus from El Mariel, in 1989 , and the crisis of the rafters, which occurred in 1994.

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