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90 Miles
 
Directed By: Juan Carlos Zaldivar
Produced In: USA, 2001
Running Time: 79 minutes
Genre: Documentary
Language: English and Spanish with English subtitles
Themes: Cuba, Cultural Identity: Latino, Immigration
Distributor: Frameline
Synopsis:
In 1980, filmmaker Juan Carlos Zaldivar was a thirteen-year-old Communist demonstrating against thousands of people who were deserting Cuba in the Mariel boatlift. Ironically, that same year, Juan Carlos' father demands that he and his older sister decide whether their family should join the overcrowded boat lifts and immigrate to the United States to rejoin their relatives in Miami. This would mean leaving behind their homeland Cuba, possibly forever. Eight years later, after moving to Miami, Juan Carlos is the only one of his family who is willing to go back to visit Cuba. Shot over a period of five years, 90 MILES looks at issues of trust, pride, and responsibility and how the complexity of these issues shape the attitudes of Cubans towards the world and the people they love. This film puts a face to a politically charged topic and serves as a testament to the Cuban and Cuban-American experience.
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