Suite_Habana

<i>Suite Habana</i>

Suite Habana

2003 film


Suite Habana is a 2003 Cuban documentary directed and written by Fernando Pérez.

Quick Facts Suite Habana, Directed by ...

The documentary was filmed with fictional cinema techniques depicting a day in a life of thirteen real people, from a ten-year-old child with Down syndrome to a 79-year-old lady who sells peanuts in the street.

The film has no dialogue, using sound and image to evoke emotional effect. Several stories are juxtaposed to convey the plot points, an unusual approach in Cuban cinema, where spoken words are often used extensively.

Critical reception

After the film's premiere in Cuba, national critics ranked it as one of the best Cuban films in decades. The film gathered several awards at international film festivals. Variety called it "A lyrical, meticulously crafted and unexpectedly melancholy homage to the battered but resilient inhabitants of a battered but resilient city."

Awards

Fernando Perez receiving the Grand Coral at the Havana Film Festival
HAVANA FILM FESTIVAL - 2003
  • Best Director
  • Best Music
  • Best Sound
  • Best Film Poster
  • FIPRESCI prize
  • Grand Coral - First Prize
UPEC Cultural Circle Award
Goya Awards (Spanish Academy Awards) - 2004
  • Candidate to the Best Spanish Language Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera de Habla Hispana)
Gramado Film Festival - 2004
  • Kikito Critics Prize
  • Special Jury Award
Donostia-San Sebastián International Film Festival - 2003
  • SIGNIS Award
Cuban Press Association Award
El Mégano Award
  • for its courageous vision of Havana's daily life and its artistic and powerful use of images and sounds
Glauber Rocha Award
Martin Luther King Memorial Center Award

See also


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