Alice In Wondertown: Thais Valdés, Reynaldo Miravalles, Alberto Pujoles, Daniel Díaz Torres: Movies & TV
Alice In Wondertown: Thais Valdés, Reynaldo Miravalles, Alberto Pujoles, Daniel Díaz Torres: Movies & TV
Review
Monty Pythonesque hijinks and an unmistakable Caribbean wit. –Cinematheque Toronto
Product Description
{WINNER - FREEDOM PRIZE Berlin Film Festival 1991}
Inspired by Lewis Carroll’s classic tale, Daniel Díaz Torres’s Alice in Wondertown is a absurdist comedy and an allegory with a dark political undercurrent. Alice is a drama teacher who goes on a cultural mission to a small town where the most bizarre occurrences are commonplace. Mirrors become doors, circus animals walk the streets, and it seems anything could happen - but everyone except Alicia seems resigned to the situation. She discovers before long that the town’s population is made up of officials and workers who have been fired for violating rules minor or illusionary, and now cannot find their way out of this strange town.
One of the most controversial films in the history of Cuban, Alice in Wondertown was banned by government authorities from Cuban theatres shortly after its release, almost resulting in the end of independence that the Cuban film industry enjoyed.
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A Satire on Oppression and Indolence,
By Amos Lassen (Little Rock, Arkansas) - See all my reviews
“Alice in Wondertown”
A Satire on Oppression and Indolence
Amos Lassen
It has been called “the most controversial film in the history of Cuba”, “Alice in Wondertown” (”Alicia en el pueblo de Maravillas”) is a film that looks at oppression and indolence in the Communist country. The film directed by Daniel Diaz Torres and starring Thais Valdes as Alice has been banned but it now brought to us by First Run Features. The film is a comedy of the absurd and a dark political allegory that is filled with wit.
The iconoclastic film is a takeoff of Lewis Carroll’s “Alice in Wonderland”. Our Alice is a drama teacher who undertakes a cultural mission to a small town where every strange things happen all of the time. The streets are filled with circus animals and mirrors turn into doors and everything and anything can happen. Alice soon discovers that the town populace is made up of former officials and workers who are guilty of rule infractions and are unable to find their way out of town.
Maravillas is an exaggeration reflection of Cuba and what Alice experiences there are almost the same kind of senseless happenings experienced by Carroll’s Alice however these reflect the problems of Cuban society–coercion, indoctrination and absolutism.
We never really know why the people were sent to Maravillas (the specific crimes) or how they feel about being there and this is quite possibly what Alice wants to find out. Even though we see the film as a perspective on Cuban society, we never understand why Alice tells us her story. The film, itself, is a wonderful merging of social realism with magic realism and there is truth in its absurdity. Polemic in nature, some have called it overly critical but be that as it may, it is interesting.
Fidel Castro and the Communist Party are targets and this is the first time that this was ever done. Full of metaphors, the film is photographed beautifully. The one drawback is that in order to fully understand the film, a deep knowledge of Cuba is required but that does not mean the film cannot be enjoyed by those without this knowledge. There is something here for everyone who likes irony and satire.Search Amazon.com: Alice In Wondertown: Thais Valdés, Reynaldo Miravalles, Alberto Pujoles, Daniel Díaz Torres: Movies & TV from AmAzon
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