‘Day of the Flowers’ review – 03.9.16
Respecting Cuba on
the big screen demands that the country’s contrasts are addressed without
glorification, and Eirene Houston’s screenplay provides the necessary balance
of locational beauty and unpatronising social commentary in her 2012 film ‘Day
of the Flowers.’ When their father dies suddenly, contrasting sisters Rosa
and Ailie fly to Cuba –
a place close to the heart of the family – to scatter his ashes. On their first
night in the country, they are taken to a popular dancing club: a money-making
outlet dealing in crude approximations of Cuban authenticity. Ailie loves the
spectacle; Rosa is uneasy. ‘They
have to give tourists what think they’ll like,’ she is solemnly informed by a
fellow traveller.
Some may argue that in turn, giving cinema-goers ‘what they
like’ would involve a multiplication of sassy, humid dance scenes on one hand,
and less focus on Rosa’s unpleasant experience with a poverty-stricken Cuban
family on the other. However, the sequence depicting Rosa’s trauma is powerful
and valid: not only does it frankly acknowledge conditions which for many are a
reality; in addition, the results on Rosa ’s
character are complex and pivotal. For the first time, the viewer is shown the
value she holds for her own life: a value previously eclipsed by her admirable
(yet occasionally misguided) compassion for others. As she is gently reminded later
in the film, one cannot ‘fight for the revolution every day.’ Before her
ordeal, she had begun to lose vital strands of her own self in the attempt.
This a
film with a deep reverence for Cuba ; its vitality, strength and
contradictions… yet with a simultaneous commitment to the parallel nuances of
its human characters. Carlos Acosta’s Tomas is serene yet deeply powerful, and
one cannot miss the luxurious twinkle during his first meeting with Rosa . He understands that she must make peace with
herself before she can achieve her goal of facilitating peace for others, and
as such, there is a complexity to their rapport which elevates it beyond that
of a generic, plot-driven romance. An unfaltering understanding of the blossom
and thorns of another’s character is an essential ingredient of love as it
should be. The film understands this, and watching the pair bristle towards
their combined fate is genuinely cathartic; a dynamic that is mirrored and
complimented by the presentation of the sisters’ own relationship.
Eva
Birthistle’s Rosa is sincere and
relatable in her humanity, while Manuel de Blas and Charity Wakefield provide
what is – for me – the most moving moment of the piece, in a single exchange of
glance. This is a thoughtful, sumptuous piece of cinema which should not be
allowed to fall off the map through lack of deserved exposure.
By
Rosa Barbour
For information about the Havana Glasgow Film Festival, visit
For information about the Havana Glasgow Film Festival, visit
instagram: havana.glasgow.film.fest
Twitter: @hgfilmfest
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