Havana
Cast :Robert Redford, Lena Olin
Director :Sydney Pollack
Studio :Universal Studios
Format :Color, Closed-captioned, Widescreen
Released Date :December 12, 1990
DVD Released Date :May 27, 2003
Language :English (Dubbed), Spanish (Subtitled), English (Original Language), Spanish (Original Language), French (Original Language)
Audience Rating :R (Restricted)
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Customer Reviews
Rating
DateMay 08, 2005
SummaryPlenty of Potential
Content
Although I can't give this one four stars, I do like the movie for its potential. Casablanca -- definitely not. But this could have been the Caribbean equivalent of "The Quiet American", one of the best movies in twenty years. Subtracting for flawed performance by Redford, some odd lapses in scripting, and pacing, it is still a very good movie. Redford's delivery was often flat. A cynical gambler finds true love (the oft-referred-to comparison to Casablanca), but doesn't look as if he cares all that much (Bogey got good and hammered, Redford acts like he's out of change for the parking meter). Then sometimes his performance sparkles. Some of the editing seemed to give us punch lines after removing the setup lines. I'm sure those cuts were made due to time restraints, but other scenes drag on overmuch and would have made better cuts. Raul Julia's name missing from both opening and closing credits was quite bizarre. Still very much worth watching, and more than once.

Rating
DateApril 25, 2005
SummaryHavana
Content
I'm at a loss why some people put down this movie. It is one of my all time favorites. That it didn't become a box office hit is understandable since it requires some interest in politics, human nature and the dilemma of people who wish to make a difference. But if you are willing to let yourself pull in by this human drama and the struggle of the Cubans you are in for a great experience. The acting, especially of Robert Redford, Lena Olin and Raul Julia is superb and I firmly believe that this movie belongs to Sydney Pollack's great successes.

Rating
DateFebruary 24, 2005
SummaryWORST Movie I've EVER SEEN!!!
Content
The acting is terrible!!! (Redford should have hung up his spurs after the "Sting"!) The dialogue is Terrible!!! The Directing is terrible!!!!!!!! The pace and tempo are out of wack. They must have spent all their budget on Redford and shiny old cars rather than story, direction, continuity, and production. AND yet there was so much potential. My frustration is unbearable!!!

Any movie I can think of is better than "Havana"!!! Try "LA Confidential", "Chinatown", "Casablanca", in fact any Bogart movie...the list is endless!!! I'd recommend my five year old's "Dumbo" ahead of "Havana".

AHAH!!! I just had a stroke of genius!!! Redford crash lands his Gulfstream V in remote Africa and loses his ability to speak, and the chimps nuture him back to health. The name of the movie, "The Homo Sapien Whisperer".




Rating
DateDecember 04, 2004
SummaryBetter than I expected
Content
This is really a beautiful movie on several levels. The sets and atmosphere really do seem to capture the feel of pre-revolution Havana. Redford is quite good in the lead, although I was less impressed Lena Olin as a leading lady. She seemed a bit stiff in many scenes and I wasn't as convinced that a hard core gambler and pleasure seeker like Redford's character would be so quick to fall for her. I thought that Raul Julia was great in a relatively small part.
The movie really was more about atmospherics for me than anything to do with the love story. I enjoyed the depiction of Havana and the decadence of it's nightlife as well as the growing threat of violence as the rebels approach. The night of the government's fall is very similar to the scene from Godfather II including people smashing parking meters, etc.
All in all I would recommend this for those interested in Cuba during that period.

Rating
DateMay 11, 2004
SummaryCuba Libre.
Content
In a highball glass, pour 1.5 - 2 oz rum over ice cubes, add the juice of 1/2 lime and fill up with coke.

That's the recipe for the drink political correctness has renamed "Rum and Coke," but which most of us also still know by its original name, Cuba Libre. And the cocktail invented just over 100 years ago to celebrate Cuba's freedom from Spain perfectly epitomizes the state of the island republic's society towards the late 1950s' end of the Batista regime: A sweet, tangy, intoxicating Caribbean foundation, mixed with the classical American exports; from Coke, cars and cigarettes to expatriates and their money ... except, alas, for the greatest thing the U.S. might have brought to Cuba, assistance in establishing democracy. Instead, during Batista's 30-year dictatorship, Cuba - and particularly Havana - became the Latin Las Vegas, a place where the action was on, the stakes were high, flesh was cheap, gambling was legal (and largely controlled by American mobster Meyer Lansky) and the party never ended.

Until, beset by the revolutionary movement led by a certain Fidel Castro, Batista fled the country in the early morning hours of January 1, 1959. And suddenly the party was over.

The last days of Batista's regime are the backdrop for 1990's "Havana," which sees high-stakes poker ace Jack Weil (Robert Redford) in Cuba for the game of his life. He has played "every elks' club and moose hole in America" and remembers every hand of every game, he tells Lansky's right-hand man Joe Volpi (Alan Arkin). Now he wants a shot at the big one - playing with guys who don't even think how much they're playing for. And he knows that the revolutionary fever in the air has the same effect on gamblers as a potent aphrodisiac on those in pursuit of Havana's other main commodity; so in Jack's eyes, now's the time or never. Yet, although liberally indulging in all of Havana's pleasures, he couldn't care less about Cuban politics. All he thinks he needs to know is who's in charge, and how to stay out of trouble.

But then he meets Roberta Duran (Lena Olin at the top of her game), the wife of a wealthy physician aligned with Castro. (Raul Julia who, despite a stellar performance, chose to remain uncredited, reportedly because he didn't receive first billing alongside Redford - a great pity, and a disservice to himself.) Now Jack falls in love, badly enough to go against his life's entire philosophy to try and save Roberta from Batista's henchmen after her husband has been arrested and supposedly killed, and she questioned and tortured by the secret police. And now Jack really does get to play the game of his life - except that now it's no longer about cards at all; and when Volpi at last does put together the big game he has lobbied for, Jack is no longer even in attendance. Instead, he's out putting his personal interests at stake for Roberta.

"Havana" was Robert Redford's and director Sydney Pollack's seventh cooperation after "This Property Is Condemned" (1966), "Jeremiah Johnson" (1972), "The Way We Were" (1973), "Three Days of the Condor" (1975), "The Electric Horseman" (1979) and "Out of Africa" (1985); and it shows, for better and for worse. At his best, Redford delivers magically, whether dealing cards at a poker table surrounded by marks and beautiful women, or arguing with Roberta about her stake in the revolution, or letting her captured husband know how he has enjoyed being with Roberta; realizing jealousy's potency in stirring a betrayed, hot-blooded husband's fighting spirit, after Jack has decided, against all self-interest, to free and reunite him with her. But there are those few occasional lines, those few mannerisms that smack of just a pinch too much routine; and why an exchange like "Were you waiting for me?" - "All my life" didn't make Redford's and Pollack's usually unfailing kitsch-o-meters go into overtilt, I honestly don't understand. (Besides, whoever had the brilliant idea of making Redford wear a Hawaii shirt in the closing scene should be flogged and hung out to dry in a Hawaii shirt himself. Eeeewwww ...)

Undeservedly, "Havana" flopped at the box office and only later began picking up audience favors. This is primarily blamed on its unfair (and shallow) initial comparison to "Casablanca," which I don't think it ever set out to replicate; in addition to its somewhat two-dimensional political outlook (and here I agree). Redford himself has also been quoted commenting on his suddenly prominent facial lines, an effect only underscored by the fact that he had last been seen on the big screen four years earlier in "Legal Eagles" with decidedly lesser visible lines. But come on, folks - the man was over fifty when he made "Havana" ... have you ever wondered to what extent you've internalized Hollywood's youth addiction if you did *not* expect his age to start showing at some point? Frankly, I rather think it's admirable if an actor whose looks have always factored highly in his appeal makes a point in going against the expectation that he submit to plastic surgery, *and* then continues to make his mark on society and the movie business regardless.

So forget "Havana"'s bad rep. This is a beautifully shot, superbly edited, sumptuous drama (a particular delight editing-wise are the scenes setting Jack's forays into Havana's night life against the city's less glamorous realities); part romance, part political thriller; magnificently scored by Dave Grusin and endowed with all of Pollack's and production designer Terence Marsh's known attention to detail, whose authenticity even "spooked" Cuban-born Tomas Milian, (who plays secret police commander Menocal), as Milian says in the DVD's featurette - and this although for obvious reasons the entire set had to be reconstructed in the Dominican Republic. It may not be one of the multiple Oscar-winning Redford-Pollack collaborations ... but overall it's still head and shoulders above many another production I'll refrain from naming here.

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