Screening event: Bitter Sugar

Director: Leon Ichaso
Dominican Republic, 1995, 75min
Format: Digital
Festival Year: 2015
Category: Feature Narrative

Cast:  René Lavan

Synopsis

Gustavo is a young Havana Communist who believes in the revolution; he hopes for a scholarship to study aeronautical engineering in Prague. But his faith in the new Cuba is tested: his father, a psychiatrist, can make four times as much playing piano at a hotel for foreigners; his sweetheart, Yolanda, wants a career as a dancer and longs for the riches of Miami; his younger brother Bobby simply wants to play rock music, and as a result is in constant trouble with the authorities. When Bobby takes a shocking step of revolt and Gustavo is refused service at a foreigners-only bar, the contradictions in his resolve to become a “new man” push him to the breaking point.

Director

Leon Ichaso was born in Havana, Cuba, August 3, 1948, into a family of well-known writers, journalists and artists. His father, Justo Rodr’guez Santos, was one of Cuba’s most respected poets and a pioneer in broadcast TV and radio -and his mother Antonia Ichaso had a radio magazine show in the 1940s. Ichaso left the island for exile in Mexico and the United States, with his mother Antonia Ichaso and sister Mari Rodriguez Ichaso, at age 14. His father stayed behind to continue his unwavering support for the Cuban Revolution. Five years later he joined his family in New York. Career Leon Ichaso is known as a director who specializes in gritty urban realism. He first made his mark with the independently made Spanish-language feature, El Super (1979), based on an Off-Broadway play of Ivan Acosta, about an immigrant building superintendent trying to make his way in New York City. It took six years for the filmmaker to follow up on this study, but Crossover Dreams (1985), was a fine first shot at a somewhat more mainstream film. The film was a hard-hitting look at different but mixed US Latino communities, life in the barrio and the potent drive of salsa music. Imported into the Hollywood scene, Ichaso found his talent for telling tough stories of the big city slotted into action series on TV (e.g., Miami Vice, Crime Story, The Equalizer) and TV movies as The Fear Inside, The Take, A Table at Ciro’s and A Kiss to Die For. Ichaso later directed Wesley Snipes’s Sugar Hill (1994), a character study wedded to a violent crime drama of a New York drug empire. In the Dominican Republic and Cuba in 1995, Ichaso made Azœcar Amarga (Bitter Sugar), a Spanish language film about a disillusioned Cuban Communist. For the next several years, Ichaso worked in several TV-movies, some of which were adaptations of acclaimed plays. Zooman (Showtime, 1995) was an adaptation of an Off-Broadway play dealing with a family coping with the murder of a child. Execution of Justice (Showtime, 1999) was also derived from a Broadway play that detailed the events behind the murders of San Francisco mayor George Moscone and supervisor Harvey Milk. While told from the point of view of the assassin, Dan White, Ichaso’s film remained neutral and demonstrated that the questions surrounding a highly charged event could not be reduced to simple answers. Ichaso next tackled a pair of small screen biographies Ali: An American Hero (Fox, 2000) and Hendrix (Showtime, 2000). He later wrote and directed the highly acclaimed biographical feature Pi–ero (2001), about the life of Puerto Rican author Miguel Pi–ero, who had the soul of a poet but lived the life of a thief. Ichaso employed a collage-like approach to the author’s life, including flashbacks, drug-induced dreams and scenes from stage performances to create a portrait of an intriguing, if difficult, person. After working again for Showtime (Sleeper Cell, 2005), he directed episodes of Cane(CBS), The Cleaner (A and E), Persons Unknown (Fox/Televisa 2008 and 2009), and developing his own future projects (Monk and Killing of the Saints), and teaching movie directing in Spain and France- Ichaso started working on the screenplay of salsa singer HŽctor Lavoe’s biography, El Cantante. This was shot in 2006 and stars Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony. His last movie Paraiso, filmed in Miami in 2008, opened during the 2009 Miami International Film Festival in March 2009 -and has played several movie festivals in 2010 and 2011. In late 2012 he directed Barbara Hershey, Rachael Leigh Cook and Nicholas Gonzalez for Sony and Lifetime in Left to Die.