The life of Reinaldo Arenas, an exiled Cuban homosexual writer, is chronicled in an adaptation of his memoir BEFORE NIGHT FALLS, directed by Julian Schnabel (BASQUIAT). Javier Bardem (in an Oscar-nominated performance) portrays Arenas as he journeys from poverty to university to the sexual revolution and homosexual subculture .. Read more
| Starring | Javier Bardem, Olivier Martinez, Andrea Di Stefano, Sean Penn |
|---|---|
| Director | Julian Schnabel |
| Genres | Drama, Gay/Lesbian |
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The life of Reinaldo Arenas, an exiled Cuban homosexual writer, is chronicled in an adaptation of his memoir BEFORE NIGHT FALLS, directed by Julian Schnabel (BASQUIAT). Javier Bardem (in an Oscar-nominated performance) portrays Arenas as he journeys from poverty to university to the sexual revolution and homosexual subculture in Havana to persecution and imprisonment under the policies of Fidel Castro for being both gay and a writer. Despite the harsh conditions of prison, the courageous Arenas continued not only to write but also to publish his works abroad. Ultimately, he was allowed to leave Cuba for America, but there he faced new struggles as a man without a country battling AIDS. Schnabel's beautifully filmed sophomore directorial effort captures the essence of Cuba during the revolution. Johnny Depp is featured in the dual supporting roles of the cross-dressing prison inmate, Bon Bon, and the brutal officer, Lieutenant Victor. A well-disguised Sean Penn appears as Cuco Sanchez. Olivier Martinez as Lazaro Gomez Carillo and Andrea Di Stefano as Pepe Malas deliver standout performances. The film received accolades at the 2000 Venice and Toronto Film Festivals.
| Starring | Javier Bardem, Olivier Martinez, Andrea Di Stefano, Sean Penn, Johnny Depp, Najwa Nimri, Michael Wincott, Hector Babenco, Vito Schnabel |
|---|---|
| Director | Julian Schnabel |
| Studio | 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 2 hrs 8 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama, Gay/Lesbian |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Released | DVD: 05 Aug 2002 Production year: 2000 |
| Format | DVD |
Director Julian Schnabel's follow-up to Basquiat is another compelling portrait of a troubled artist. This time, the focus is on gay Cuban poet Reinaldo Arenas, brought to brave, startling and moving life by Spanish superstar Javier Bardem, who won a well-deserved Oscar nomination for his searing portrayal. Arenas was born in rural Cuba in 1943 and died in New York in 1990 after contracting Aids, and Schnabel's polished, visually distinctive and confident biography covers the key episodes in the poet's traumatic life. His poverty-stricken childhood, his taboo homosexual lifestyle in 1950s Havana, and his revolutionary awakening in the sixties made Arenas an intellectual outcast, anathema to Fidel Castro's regime. Schnabel's fascinating study of the poet's life and work expertly paints an emotionally rewarding picture, brilliantly shot and edited. Schnabel finds provocative beauty even in the starker moments, as Bardem inhabits the mind-set of his colourful character with a keen and rare insight. An intelligent, lucid and affecting masterpiece that succinctly captures the spirit of Arenas himself.
Episodic account of a hectic existence, often requiring an audience to work harder than it should to make sense of events.
Heavy going, oppressive and mostly very depressing, this film is an unglamorous and revealing look at the man and his times. The history of the Cuban revolution from the perspective of a gay writer is the story of banned and persecuted art every where... no rescue, no hope.
The words are beautiful. The soundtrack mesmerizing. It left me wanting to read some of the work he suffered so much to produce and oh so glad that I live in a mostly fair, tolerant and comfortable society and not Cuba or the USA.
Heavy going, oppressive and mostly very depressing, this film is an unglamorous and revealing look at the man and his times. The history of the Cuban revolution from the perspective of a gay writer is the story of banned and persecuted art every where... no rescue, no hope.
The words are beautiful. The soundtrack mesmerizing. It left me wanting to read some of the work he suffered so much to produce and oh so glad that I live in a mostly fair, tolerant and comfortable society and not Cuba or the USA.
Jean-Do Bauby suffered a stroke at 42 that left him entirely paralyzed, save for his left eye. "Locked in" syndrome is a very rare and almost unimaginable condition. Yet thanks to Bauby and his medical team we now have a good idea of what it involves, mentally as well as physically. Paralysis might not seem the most promising basis for a movie, but it proves fascinating on a number of levels, not least of which is the process that enabled Bauby to communicate. Screenwriter Ronald Harwood's... Read more