Blame It on Fidel: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 23:35, 27 January 2008
La Faute à Fidel | |
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Directed by | Julie Gavras |
Produced by | Sylvie Pialat Mathieu Bompoint |
Cinematography | Nathalie Durand |
Edited by | Pauline Dairou |
Music by | Armand Amar |
Distributed by | Koch-Lorber Films |
Release dates | September 10, 2006 (France) August 3, 2007 (USA) |
Running time | 99 min. |
Country | France / Italy |
Language | French |
Blame it On Fidel (original French title: La Faute à Fidel) is a 2006 French drama film directed by Julie Gavras.
Plot summary
A 9-year-old girl, Anna de la Mesa (played by Nina Kervel), weathers big changes in her household as her parents become radical political activists in 1970-71 Paris. Her Spanish-born lawyer father Fernando (played by Stefano Accorsi) is inspired by his family's opposition to Franco and Salvador Allende's victory in Chile; he quits his job and becomes a liaison for Chilean activists in France. Her mother, a Marie Claire journalist-turned-writer documenting the stories of women's abortion ordeals, supports her husband and climbs aboard the ideological bandwagon. As a result, Anna's French bourgeois life is over. She must adjust to refugee nannies, international cuisine and a cramped apartment full of noisy revolutionaries.
The film is filled with a dizzying array of philosophy and ideology - everything from Communism to Catholicism to Greek and Asian mythology - which Anna must reconstruct from confusion to her own set of beliefs. As she negotiates her way through this ideological maze until ultimate internalisation of her parents' admirable (albeit ad-hoc administered) objectives, we are exposed to a witty analysis of stereotyping, misinformation, the potential hypocrisies of ideologies and the potential false hopes of idealism.
Awards
Blame It On Fidel won the MPA's Michel D'Ornano Prize for a promising first French film.
Premieres
The film had its New York City premiere on August 3, 2007.
References