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A Tribute to the San Francisco International Film Festival at 50

Wednesday, March 14, 2007
7:30 p.m. I Am Cuba
Mikhail Kalatozov (Cuba/USSR, 1962)

PFA Collection Print

(Soy Cuba/Ja Kuba). “Here is a true film maudit. Never before shown in the United States, impossible to see in Cuba (where it was called ‘I Am NOT Cuba’), and scorned in Russia as agitprop kitsch, I Am Cuba was made in 1962 as an act of Soviet-Cuban friendship. Yevgeny Yevtushenko gets credit for the film's poetic structure—a loose series of choreographed tableaux. From first shot to last, (it is) a staggering visual experience, comparable to Eisenstein and von Sternberg in its expressive, almost experimental black and white cinematography. It is also a deliriously one-of-a-kind movie, wildly schizophrenic in its bizarre mix of Slavic solemnity and Latin sensuality.”

—Tom Luddy, Telluride Film Festival. Screened in SFIFF 1993.

• Written by Yevgeny Yevtushenko, Enriqué Pineda Barnet. Photographed by Sergei Urusevsky. With Luz María Collazo, Jean Bouise, Sergio Corrieri, José Gallardo. (136 mins, In Spanish and English with Russian voiceover, B&W, 35mm, PFA Collection, permission Milestone)