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Blame It on Fidel! 2006 123movies

Blame It on Fidel! 2006 123movies

Nov. 29, 200699 Min.
Your rating: 0
8 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: La faute à Fidel! 2006 123movies, Full Movie Online – Hello, my name is Anna and I am nine years old. I wish you had known me before – I mean before my aunt Marga and my cousin Pilar came to my parents’house -, I was such a happy little girl. Before their coming life was a bed of roses. Of course my little brother could be a pain in the neck – little brothers always are, aren’t they? – but there was that wonderful big house, there was my Cuban-born nanny who cooked so well, there was the bath before dinner, not to mention this wonderful catechism class at the catholic school. But they did come, those Spanish intruders. And now never heard before names like “Franco”, “Allende”, “Women’s Lib”, “abortion”, the lot, have got into my life. Daddy and Mummy have suddenly become “communists”, although this a term that Bon Papa and Bonne Maman (my grandparents from Bordeaux, in fact) just hate. Because of the intruders not only did we move to a tiny apartment but the place is invaded day and night by “barbudos” (bearded men). No more bath before dinner and no more catechism class. How long will I be able to tolerate such a scandal?.
Plot: A 9-year-old girl weathers big changes in her household as her parents become radical political activists in 1970-71 Paris.
Smart Tags: #title_directed_by_female #tickling_a_child #catechism #bath #class #girl #spanish #bordeaux #catholic #school #radical #communist #political_activist #nanny #catholic_school #abortion #f_rated #animal_trap #chilean_immigrant #political_exile #living_in_exile


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Ratings:

7.5/10 Votes: 5,148
93% | RottenTomatoes
74/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 47 Popularity: 3.758 | TMDB

Reviews:

Cute and vital growing up story from a little girl’s POV
This debut film by Julie Gavras, daughter of famed Greek-born director Costa-Gavras (e.g., Z, 1969), was nominated for the Grand Jury Award at the Sundance Film Festival in 2007. In addition to directing, Julie Gavras also collaborated with Arnaud Cathrine on the script which they adapted from a novel by Italian novelist Domitilla Calamai. What is striking about the story is the way it reconstructs how girls become social, how they learn about their world, how they question it, and how they reconcile the contradictions, and how they grow up.

Doing the growing up is nine-year-old Anna de la Mesa, played with fidelity, wit, and skill beyond her years by Nina Kervel-Bey. She is bourgeois to the core, following the lead of her maternal grandparents, who own a vineyard in Bordeaux, and her favorite nanny and housekeeper who lost everything to the Communists when Fidel Castro came to power in Cuba. Her parents, however, are infatuated with the Left, especially with the rise of Allende to power in Chile. The year is 1970-71.

Anna loves their house and garden and going to Catholic school. She is proper and sensible. When they lose their house, and have to let the nanny go, and end up renting an apartment in Paris, Anna is upset and demands to know why things have changed. When it appears that they don’t have as much money, Anna begins turning off the lights and turning down the heat to save money. When they want her to transfer to the public school, she demurs and a compromise is made: she can continue to go to Catholic school but she is not allowed to take Bible studies. So when that time of the day comes, she has to stand up and go outside the classroom door and wait.

But Anna is strong emotionally and intellectually. She questions everything and is not self-conscious about being singled out. The other girls may laugh, but when she gets into a fight with one of them, she manages to win her over afterwards so that they are friends, even though their parents are not.

There is in the background the political disputes between the Right and the Left, between parents who change the subject when the question how babies are made is brought up, and those who tell the truth, in short between the bourgeois and the bohemian. One gets the sense that Gavras and Anna are wiser than the disputants, and that there is something to appreciate in both ways of life.

It is impossible not to identify with little Anna, partially because she herself is so fair, and partially because it is such a thrill to see the psychology of the socialization process displayed so well and true in a movie, but also because Nina Kervel-Bey is such a powerful little actress who was so wondrously directed by Julie Gavras. This is one of the best performances by a preteen actor that I have ever seen. Kervel-Bey simply dominates the film and commands the screen.

Will Anna shed her petite bourgeois ways and embrace the politics of her parents? I highly recommend that you see this film and find out.

(Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book “Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can’t Believe I Swallowed the Remote!” Get it at Amazon!)

Review By: DennisLittrell
La faute à papa!
Julie Gavras is famous politically committed director Costa-Gavras’daughter and it shows. But be reassured “La faute à Fidel”, her first fiction film (coming after a pair of interesting documentaries) isn’t a carbon copy of a Costa Gavras movie in any way. It is much more exciting than just that in that it examines thoroughly the pros and the cons of leftist involvement, mainly its negative repercussions on family life.

The plot revolves around little nine-year-old Anna( played to perfection by tense, brooding, occasionally warming to a welcome smile Nina Kervel), whose life is turned upside down when her parents abruptly change from well-to-do upper middle class people to leftist activists, with a feminist inclination concerning the mother. The whole film will describe the difficulties of a little girl who loses all of her privileges out of the blue, how she understandably rebels against such injustice (even rich kids have a cause to defend!) and who very slowly gets to understand her parents’ choices, eventually coming to terms with the situation and growing mature (more mature than the standard brat) in the process.

The movie really charmed me from the beginning to the end, ringing true all the time (the early seventies are well captured, whether when it comes to the production values or the depiction of the mentalities of the time). And Julie Gavras knows her subject on the tip of her fingers. Her parents – just like Anna’s ones – have always been leftist activists and wasn’t her dwelling-place invaded by Chilean “barbudos” while her dad was preparing “Missing”?

The viewers share her empathy for the central character and appreciate her refusal to resort to caricature. Of course Anna’s grandparents are “grand bourgeois” but they are not horrible persons. On the other hand, a leftist activist is not perfect by definition. Those ambiguities give depth to the characters and make them believable throughout. And Julie Gavras has a knack for unexpected details enhancing the viewer’s interest and involvement in the story. I was particularly amused by such features as Anna adoring her catechism class, the presence of a violently anticommunist Cuban domestic worker (hence the title), the succession of nannies exiled from different countries torn by ideological conflicts, Anna singing “Ay, Carmela!” to protest against her parents quarreling and many others.

All in all, a wonderful initiation movie that augurs well for Julie Gavras’ future career.

Review By: guy-bellinger

Other Information:

Original Title La faute à Fidel!
Release Date 2006-11-29
Release Year 2006

Original Language fr
Runtime 1 hr 39 min (99 min) (USA), 1 hr 39 min (99 min) (France), 1 hr 39 min (99 min) (Argentina)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated Unrated
Genre Drama, History
Director Julie Gavras
Writer Domitilla Calamai, Arnaud Cathrine, Julie Gavras
Actors Nina Kervel-Bey, Julie Depardieu, Stefano Accorsi
Country Italy, France
Awards 1 win & 3 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby SR
Aspect Ratio 2.35 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length 2,729 m (Portugal, 35 mm)
Negative Format 35 mm
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format 35 mm

Original title La faute à Fidel!
TMDb Rating 7.011 47 votes

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