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6.0/10
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A lesbian, an aspiring actor, an aspiring singer, a low-class marriage, a neighborhood community and 2 renowned directors have memorable less-than-24-hour-long experiences while living in/vi... Read allA lesbian, an aspiring actor, an aspiring singer, a low-class marriage, a neighborhood community and 2 renowned directors have memorable less-than-24-hour-long experiences while living in/visiting the capital of Cuba.A lesbian, an aspiring actor, an aspiring singer, a low-class marriage, a neighborhood community and 2 renowned directors have memorable less-than-24-hour-long experiences while living in/visiting the capital of Cuba.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Featured reviews
'Seven (or if you prefer, '7') Days in Havana' is a series of little filmettes, each by one of seven directors, set in Havana. At first it seems the connecting thread between the segments is foreigners: a US student dates a drag artist, a Serbian film director attends a film festival, a Palestinian man waits to see the President... but the later segments concentrate on Cubans: a young woman caught in a lesbian relationship is forced to undergo a cleansing ritual; an old woman bullies her neighbours into building a fountain for the Virgin Mary in her living room... The quality is variable (I nodded off during the lesbian one, which really drags; but found the fountain in the living room segment with its colourful characters and lively storyline most enjoyable), but in the main I enjoyed the total package. How accurate a portrayal of modern-day Cuba it is I don't know, though.
The seven days, segments and directors are Monday (El Yuma, Benicio del Toro; Yuma is Cuban slang for "American" or "gringo"), Tuesday (Jam Session, Pablo Trapero), Wednesday (The Temptation of Cecilia, Julio Medem), Thursday (Diary of a Beginner, Elia Suleiman), Friday (Ritual, Gaspar Noe), Saturday (Dulce Amargo, Juan Carlos Tabío), Sunday (The Fountain, Laurent Cantet).
As in any many-director movie the final product is somewhat uneven, but all segments contribute to an atmospheric picture of modern Cuba and of its problems (e. g. the temptation to leave in search of a seemingly better future and the consequences). Tabío's segment is the most moving (with the always excellent Jorge Perugorría and an excellent cast) and, as expected, Suleiman's contribution is whimsical and humorous. All segments are worth watching.
As in any many-director movie the final product is somewhat uneven, but all segments contribute to an atmospheric picture of modern Cuba and of its problems (e. g. the temptation to leave in search of a seemingly better future and the consequences). Tabío's segment is the most moving (with the always excellent Jorge Perugorría and an excellent cast) and, as expected, Suleiman's contribution is whimsical and humorous. All segments are worth watching.
I'm going to come over a little bias because I was invited to the premiere in Havana - which was subject to the vagaries of technology in Cuba and it meant that I didn't see the final chapter.
I wasn't fussed about seeing the film before it happened, I'd rather have spent the time drinking rum around the corner from the cinema.
The reality was that by the time we'd all seen the film we were all drawn in, hooked, and entirely captured by the simple brilliance of the performance.
Life in Cuba is like nowhere else in the world. The clashing combination of political and ideological cultures is unique. The sacrifice, the clash of ancient and modern perspective, the desire of modern accompaniments. It's all explored. And only the hardest of folks would drive things that way.
I wasn't fussed about seeing the film before it happened, I'd rather have spent the time drinking rum around the corner from the cinema.
The reality was that by the time we'd all seen the film we were all drawn in, hooked, and entirely captured by the simple brilliance of the performance.
Life in Cuba is like nowhere else in the world. The clashing combination of political and ideological cultures is unique. The sacrifice, the clash of ancient and modern perspective, the desire of modern accompaniments. It's all explored. And only the hardest of folks would drive things that way.
I will keep this review short and spoiler-free.
"7 Days In Havana" is a compilation of seven short stories, each with it's own director and character(s). The first two "days" seemed to be taking the film in the right direction, but after that everything fell apart.
Some elements try to bridge together some of the "days", but the whole structure of the storytelling ends up being an inconsistent mess.
I thought that all the cliché representations of Cuba would be lacking, but "7 days in Havana" gives almost nothing new.
A wasted Saturday night for a movie I would not re-watch.
"7 Days In Havana" is a compilation of seven short stories, each with it's own director and character(s). The first two "days" seemed to be taking the film in the right direction, but after that everything fell apart.
Some elements try to bridge together some of the "days", but the whole structure of the storytelling ends up being an inconsistent mess.
I thought that all the cliché representations of Cuba would be lacking, but "7 days in Havana" gives almost nothing new.
A wasted Saturday night for a movie I would not re-watch.
10klapka
Magnificent, but clearly not for many that are expecting to see a Hollywood action movie.
I highly recommend it to people that are looking for moments that touch the soul. 7 dias en La Habana did that for me.
Enjoy!
Did you know
- TriviaThe film competed in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Novogodnee kino, ya lyublyu tebya! (2015)
- How long is 7 Days in Havana?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- 7 Days in Havana
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- €3,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $1,905,509
- Runtime
- 2h 9m(129 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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