Hello Hemingway

1990 "A human being can be destroyed but not defeated"
6.9| 1h25m| en
Details

The plot, set in Havana in the last period of Fulgencio Batista's dictatorship, follows a young girl whose aspirations to obtain a scholarship in America, against the odds, are paralleled with her reading of Ernest Hemingway's "The Old Man and the Sea".

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Also starring Enrique Molina

Also starring José Antonio Rodríguez

Reviews

Phonearl Good start, but then it gets ruined
Sexyloutak Absolutely the worst movie.
Claire Dunne One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
Matylda Swan It is a whirlwind of delight --- attractive actors, stunning couture, spectacular sets and outrageous parties.
Lee Eisenberg Fernando Pérez's "Hello Hemingway" looks at 1950s Havana through the eyes of impoverished high school girl Larita (Laura de la Uz), who hopes to study in the United States. Larita lives near Ernest Hemingway, while idolizing the likes of Paul Newman, Tony Curtis and Elvis Presley. Along with trying as hard as possible to get a scholarship to the US, Larita occasionally participates in protests against the Batista regime. At once a study of Cuba right before the revolution and also a look at an individual's hope of a better life, the film is certainly a fine addition to the pantheon of historical movies told through children's eyes, like Joe Dante's "Matinee".I've only seen a few Cuban movies, but I have liked them all. It'll be nice when Americans are finally allowed to travel to the Caribbean island. But beyond that, "Hello Hemingway" shows how much better movies are when they concentrate on plot and characters, as opposed to every blow-'em-up flick released by Hollywood.It seems like it would have been hard for a Cuban director to get permission to use The Diamonds' "Little Darlin'".
gentendo Cultural Awareness.This film demonstrates a clear distinction between two types of social classes: the upper community of wealth versus the lower community of poverty. Larita and her family are depicted as the struggling immigrant class determined to fulfill the American dream. Ironically, their poor living conditions are effectively contrasted with Ernest Hemingway's mansion of wealth and prestige. The director of the film illustrates this concept a lot by using various compare/contrast techniques: As Hemingway is driven by a chauffeur in his stretched Cadillac, Larita's family struggles to provide food on the table; Hemingway has libraries of books dedicated to his name while Larita struggles to overcome the obstacles in gaining her scholarship. Though these two communities keep their respected distances from one another, there are never any traces of smugness in the former or jealously in the latter. If anything, Larita has only strong admiration for the respected author, hoping that she will one day be able to achieve the same for herself.Another aspect worth mentioning that is found in this community is their fondness towards meaning. Whether meaning is extracted from Hemingway's novels, in the schoolroom or life's harsh experiences, the characters, particularly Larita, seem to desire a life full of meaning. To capture this meaning, Larita compiles the lessons that life has taught her into her journal—her only real secure friend throughout the film. Her grandmother is also a conduit for her sources of meaning as she urges her to introduce herself to Hemingway. Perhaps if she introduces herself she can better become acquainted with the author that gave her life meaning. In these respects, Larita immerses herself in the life examined and continues her pursuance in philosophy and art—perhaps two subjects that invoke the most meaning out of any other subjects.Character Arc.The film begins very sap-happy and effervescent—demonstrating the pleasures of youth and innocence. Larita's is a diligent school girl whose love for philosophy and art is her driving passion. She is able to share this passion with her schoolmaster and grandmother who direct her attention in applying for a scholarship in the United States. Her love for books and academia also lead her to a librarian who suggests that she reads the renowned story by Hemingway, Old Man in the Sea. She is told that though the story is simple enough for a child to comprehend, it also contains great meaning behind the words that even a philosopher would be satiated by. Though naivety seems to motivate her happy-go-lucky persona, as she reads the Hemingway novel, the joys from her youth fade from her countenance and she begins to toil against the waves of mortality. The words of the story parallel the events taking place in her life. Just as the Old Man's dream is to travel out to sea and find a fish, so too is Larita's dream to acquire an American scholarship and publish books. As the Old Man gets caught up in the storms of the sea, Larita finds herself in the difficult storms of love troubles, family crisis's and scholarship demands. As the Old Man catches and then loses his fish to a hungry shark, so too is Larita's life fed to the unfortunate circumstances that surround her (i.e. her father getting fired from his job, Baltista trying to start a revolution). Though at the end of the film she does not get her boyfriend back nor does she acquire the scholarship she desired, she's becomes humbled by all that she has experienced. As she is seen standing on the outskirts of the ocean, her voice over narrates how she chooses to find meaning in the Hemingway novel despite the difficulties she has suffered. It is here that she learns the difference between the given good and the expected good. The given good is that she has survived the tumultuous winds that have beat incessantly upon her shores; the expected good was for her to achieve all that she had previously desired but did not. Perhaps the director's purpose in developing Larita's arc this way was to demonstrate the following idea: Don't set for yourself an expectation because if it isn't met, disappointment is inevitable; if it is met, your gratitude is undermined which in turn undermines your happiness.
jotix100 Director Fernando Perez's body of work is entirely different from most of his contemporaries working in the Cuban cinema, as his stories present ideas and situations that other directors wouldn't dare to take. One wonders how does he manage to get this films shown in his own country, or even abroad.This film is full of symbolism. The parallel between Larita and the great American writer, Ernest Hemingway, specifically, his own work, The Old Man and the Sea, is at the center of the story.Larita wants to overcome the obstacles in front of her to get a scholarship, but like the Old Man in the story, she ends up defeated by forces that are much bigger than her. As fate has it, the one time she goes looking for Hemingway at the villa where he lives, she is told the great writer is hunting in Africa. We see Larita scanning the horizon, looking north. Well, some fifty years later, her fellow countrymen probably are using this area to stage the exodus in precarious vessels to go to Florida, or to a death at sea. In fact, Mr. Perez seems to be telling us the more things change, the more they stay the same, which is the case after more than forty years of the present regime in that country. The best excuse for seeing this film is the beautiful work by the actress playing Larita, Laura de la Uz. She is totally convincing and a natural in the hands of her director.
alex-187 It's a pity that third world films don't get a distribution the way anything coming from Western Europe and Northern America gets. Anytime I leave a cinema after having seen a masterpiece such as this, I got the feeling that the distribution guys to be able to let us see any picture shot in the dominant world are depriving us of a lot of wonderful films they are too absentminded to sit and watch (and if they did, could they understand them anyway?). Laura de la Uz, the teenage protagonist in this film, is deserving of an Oscar (if the Oscar ever meant anything to anybody) and I'm sure that whoever got a prize that year in the best female main character category robbed her. While I'm writing, it's 1999, the film is dated 1990 and my heart aches at the thought that she could have starred in more films or, even worse, she could have made no fortune with her acting and could now be a forgotten school teacher or bartender. Pérez himself, who has shot only four films so far and whose "La vida es silbar" is almost as good as this, is a great director, as deserving as that other great Latin-American Solanas.