The screening will be introduced by special guests from Cuba, distinguished cinema actors Mirtha Ibarra and Eslinda Núñez.
A clever drama about resisting machismo in all areas of Cuban society. The female lead is a dockworker, played by one of Cuba’s distinguished actors, Mirtha Ibarra. A celebrated film with meaning for all of society. This entertaining satire tells the story of Oscar, a married scriptwriter who is researching the social problem of male chauvinism in the workplace for a film. Focussing on dockworkers, he encounters the sexism and contradictions of the film director, Arturo, and…himself, when he starts an affair with female dockworker Lina.
This film, set in the present day, clearly aimed to challenge the Cuban public about their own behaviour in the workplace and outside it, encouraging women to call out sexism and stereotypes, like Lina does. The constitution of 1976 had enshrined sexual equality but in the early 1980s there was a shift in gear in Cuban cinema to redefine itself as more urgently and critical of ongoing problems in society.
The mix of fiction and current reality reinforces the revolution as an ongoing process. As the film opens a real life dockworker being interviewed says “I've changed by 80 per cent.... Equality between men and women is right and proper, but up to a point…”
Please bear in mind that the age and rarity of this film means that the quality may not be what you are used to, however this is the last remaining version and a rare opportunity to see a hugely important and influential Cuban film of the 1980s.