Memories of Overdevelopment

Memories of Overdevelopment
Directed by Miguel Coyula
Produced by David Leitner
Written by Miguel Coyula
based on a novel by Edmundo Desnoes
Starring Ron Blair
Susana Pérez
Lester Martínez
Music by Dika Durbuzovic, Hayes Greenfield, Miguel Coyula
Distributed by Pirámide
Release date
  • 22 January 2010 (2010-01-22)
Running time
112 minutes
Country Cuba
Language Spanish, English

Memories of Overdevelopment (Spanish: Memorias del Desarrollo) is a 2010 Cuban film. Written and directed by Miguel Coyula, the story is based on a novel by Edmundo Desnoes, also the author of the 1968 classic Memories of Underdevelopment. This independent film was produced by David Leitner and features Cuban actor, Ron Blair as the lead character. It is the first Cuban dramatic feature film with scenes filmed both in Cuba and the United States. After its world Premiere at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival, it went to gather several awards and honors. The International Film Guide described it as one of the best films Cuba has produced.[1]

Plot

Sergio Garcet is an intellectual who abandons the Cuban Revolution and 'underdevelopment' behind only to find himself at odds with the ambiguities of his new life in the 'developed' world.

Highly episodical, the film consists of flashbacks, daydreams, and hallucinations comprising live-action, animation, and newsreel footage assembled to suggest the way personal memory works, subjectively and emotionally.

Production

Production of “Memorias del Desarrollo” took five years, starting in 2005 and completed in 2010, with locations in five countries. According to Director Miguel Coyula, his first draft of the screenplay was a faithful adaptation of Edmundo Desnoes' novel. But as he began filming and editing simultaneously, he became aware of new possibilities, which would radically alter the narrative structure of the original novel as well as its characters. The film did not follow the traditional chronology of writing, shooting and editing. This required a new approach where pre-production, production and postproduction no longer needed to exist as distinct elements but rather as an integral interactive seamless process. This new way of working was not meant as a shortcut, but rather as a way of revealing new narrative layers of the work as it evolved to create the director’s personal vision.[2]

Coyula would take advantage of everything around him that he thought would add to the film, heavily manipulating images digitally, into the film’s final highly fragmented narrative. For example, the scenes with the 9/11 footage, which the director had recorded years before; the Paris, London and Tokyo scenes, which were shot while Coyula was travelling invited to film festivals presenting his film Red Cockroaches. Most of the various location shoots were done without permits, trough favors from friends, and with a minimal crew consisting mostly of director Miguel Coyula, producer David W. Leitner and lead actor Ron Blair, easily adapting at a moment’s notice and without the constraints of a rigid schedule. The film's most decisive work however took place in the editing room. In several viusal presentations Coyula stated that no shot in the film escaped digital manipulation of some kind, which included, green screen, compositing in recreating sets, double exposures, replacing backgrounds, changing lighting, weather conditions, performing digital art direction, and actors shot in different countries performing together on screen.[3]

Producer David Leitner initially hoped to raise 2 million dollars for the project. But after realizing there was no interest from film production companies neither in North or South America, they reverted to a strategy closer to Coyula's first feature, Red Cockroaches. The film was funded by executive producers Steve Pieczenik, and Suzana Dejkanovic, associate producers Juan Martinez, and Michael Ferris Gibson as well as the Guggenheim Fellowship Coyula was awarded in 2009 for this project. While working on a low budget delayed completion by five years, it also allowed Coyula to have total creative control of the film.

Reception

Memorias del Desarrollo received almost unanimous positive reviews throughout its Film Festival run. An initial negative review by Variety’s Robert Koehler [4] after its premiere at Sundance, described the film as “an unfortunate follow up to Tomas Gutierrez Alea’s masterpiece… the erratically edited film misses Desnoes' rhythm and poetics, coming off as borderline amateur.” Subsequently James Greenberg from Hollywood Reporter considered it “Thoughtful and cinematically bold... an affecting portrait of modern man becoming more and more isolated from a world he helped to create.” [5] Bérénice Reynaud at Senses of Cinema wrote “Coyula ups the ante by over-compositing the image and saturating the colors, creating a complex kaleidoscope, which in turns dictates the editing of the sequences in a kinetic, non-linear way. Paralleling free association, the structure blurs the lines between actual events, fake memories, projections, irritation at American pop culture, political anger, rambling and resentments… These techniques allow Coyula to further destabilize his character, to create a palpable tension between the film and Desnoes’ text, and to eventually reappropriate (or salvage) his trajectory in exile.” [6] Latin American Film Scholar Michael Chanan declared it “A dazzling and disconcerting work of great bravado… A paradigm for a new digital cinema beholden to no orthodoxy.” [7] Cuban writer and critic Orlando Luis Pardo wrote in Diario de Cuba that the film was “A memorable moment in the Cuban Arts”.[8] Cinema Without Border’s critic Robin Menken chose it as the Best Film of 2010.[9] The International Film Guide described it in its 2011 survey as “One of the Best Films Cuba has produced”.[1] However the film remains largely unseen outside of Cuba, due to the lack of a distributor.

Honors

Awards

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Best Cuban Films of the year" (PDF). Retrieved 2011-01-01.
  2. Coyula, Miguel (August 13, 2009). "Guggenheim Fellows Artistic Statement". Fine Arts Examiner. Retrieved August 13, 2009.
  3. Lizarraga, Milagros (Nov 18, 2010). "Memorias del Desarrollo Cine Cubano". Milagros Lizarraga. Retrieved Nov 18, 2010.
  4. Koehler, Robert (January 23, 2010). "Memories of Overdevelopment". Variety. Retrieved January 23, 2010.
  5. Greenberg, James (January 14, 2010). "Memories of Overdevelopment". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved January 14, 2010.
  6. Reynaud, Berenice (July 11, 2010). "The Image and Its Discontent". Senses of Cinema. Retrieved July 11, 2010.
  7. Chanan, Michael (July 11, 2010). "Memories of Memories". Putney Debater. Retrieved July 11, 2010.
  8. Pardo Lazo, Orlando Luis (December 20, 2010). "La historia al estilo de un Comic". Diario de Cuba. Retrieved December 20, 2010.
  9. Menken, Robin (January 23, 2011). "Best Film of 2010". Cinema Without Borders. Retrieved January 23, 2011.
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