| Index | 5 reviews in total |
13 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
How many films from 1966 are still relevant today?, 21 June 2000
![]()
Author:
Aw-komon from Chatsworth, CA
Forget post-revolutionary Cuba; right here in America, in 2000, there is enough bureaucracy for the comedic lessons of Alea's great film about people's propensity to conform at all costs to absurd restrictions from 'above' and cause misery to others rather than risk the slightest insecurity to themselves, to be driven home painfully. This is a really funny film but one that makes you think, like Tati's 'Playtime,' Fellini's early films or some of Bunuel's. This film is deeply critical and ridicules everything that is part and parcel of government enforced socialism. You can't fault Castro for not having a sense of humor, if he agreed to release this film. Leo Beower's understated music is, as always, excellent.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
A very good movie with lots of imagination to spare, 19 June 2006
![]()
Author:
juliomontoya2000 from San José, Costa Rica
For a movie that was released 40 years ago, this one has aged
particularly well.
I think I'm not exaggerating by saying that this movie represents
something of a precursor of the Monty Python movies, alas, not so
irreverent. But the way it deals with the topic, and the imaginative
gags and inter-cuts that it has, can only remind you of those English
geniuses.
But is also many things. A little of Three Stooges here. Even a little
Chaplin there...
How you can make something funny out of the situation of a family (the
main character and his aunt) that cannot get his relative buried, and
have to keep him home until the red tape is overpowered, without losing
sight of the human touch and their despair?. You'd need a very skillful
director to juggle all that successfully.
I Haven't seen or heard of a Latin American movie like this one. It
must be considered a milestone in Latin American cinema (and certainly,
in world cinema). Regretfully, not the style, or the genius of the
director Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, seem to have had dedicated followers.
I'm afraid that has something to do with the Cuban origin, not because
of Cuban backlash, but because of lack of interest or attention over
Cuban art during the 60's. Latin America has produced a lot of movies,
but most of them are dead serious. When somebody comes with the idea of
a comedy, it is very light, unfunny and clichéd, nothing to tell the
world about, with very few exceptions.
That's why I was surprised by LA MUERTE DE UN BURÓCRATA and I highly
recommend it, if you can find it somehow.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
A surprisingly critical and hilarious vision of Havana in '66, 6 May 1999
Author:
(harkish@hotmail.com) from Palo Alto, CA
When lent this film by a Spanish professor, my expectations were not
high --
I had no idea this film from the early years of revolutionary Cuba was by
Gutierrez Alea, Tinton, the director of Strawberries and Chocalate. Now,
having seen the film, I wonder how it is that such a wonderful,
imaginative
work is not better known. For a good laugh, this can hardly be
beat.
"Death of a Bureaucrat"(Muerte de un burocrata) is the story of a body
that
just can't get in the ground, and the frustrations suffered by the
deceased's family in trying to address this situation. With the themes of
bureaucratic rigidity, death, burial and the challenges of (then)
modern-day
Cuban life, we see linkages to Tinton's last work, "Guantanamera". The
director has played with a range of techniques borrowed from some of the
greats -- we find Bunuel's dream sequences, Chaplin's battles with the
machine, and Keaton's daring-do. Hopefully, with the success of Tinton's
final works, some of his earlier works will come into vogue.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
THE DEATH OF A BUREAUCRAT (Tomas Gutierrez Alea, 1966) ***, 16 December 2007
![]()
Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
Although I have consciously kept my foreign film viewing to a minimum
during this Christmas season, I couldn't resist purchasing this one
(whose release on R2 DVD from Network came literally out of left field)
and watching it instantly, given its opening dedication to many an
exponent of cinema (more on this later). As far as I can recall, it
also marks my introduction to Cuban cinema which, as can be surmised
by the title, deals with the country's social structure; considering
the political situation of the time in which it was made, this is
hardly a surprise
but, what is unexpected is the fact that it treats
the subject matter as black comedy!
The plot resolves itself in a succession of ironic developments with
respect to the pension coming to the widowed wife of a veritable
working-class hero (his sculpting endeavors and unfortunate demise are
depicted via a stylized animation sequence): to get it, she needs her
husband's union card but his equally proletarian comrades had it
buried with him as a symbolic gesture. Her milquetoast nephew, who's
really the hero of the film, decides to have the body exhumed but,
officially, two years have to pass before this can be legitimately
done; so, he hires two men to steal the body and then proposes to have
it buried once more but, since there's no record of it having been
exhumed in the first place, technically, this isn't possible either.
And so on and so forth, with numerous episodes involving legal red tape
(which ought to bring a smile and a strong sense of empathy to anyone
who has ever dealt with a government entity)
until the young man is
literally driven to madness and murder! The film, then, ends with the
funeral of this other bureaucrat
Going back to that dedication I mentioned earlier, the full text (typed
on screen along with the film's full credits at the very beginning and
signed by the director) reads thus: "The film is dedicated to Luis
Bunuel, Oliver Hardy, Stan Laurel, Ingmar Bergman, Harold Lloyd, Akira
Kurosawa, Orson Welles, Juan Carlos Tabio, Elia Kazan, Buster Keaton,
Jean Vigo, Marilyn Monroe and all those who, in one way or another,
have taken part in the film industry since the days of Lumiere." This
is no faint praise, either, as THE DEATH OF A BUREAUCRAT features a
handful of Bunuelian dream sequences and a general mockery of Christian
burial services (one highly amusing little scene is when the nephew
pilfers ice cubes for his drink from his aunt's supply who is forever
breaking ice in order to preserve her husband's body!); a delightful
tit-for-tat routine of wanton destruction occurring, of all places, at
the cemetery (and which even develops into a Laurel & Hardy-style
custard pie fight!); and, at one point, we're also treated to some
Harold Lloyd-type antics on a ledge when our hero finds himself locked
inside an office building!
Director Tomas Gutierrez Alea is himself generally considered to be the
finest Cuban film-maker and among his other works worth mentioning are
THE TWELVE CHAIRS (1962; which is also available on R2 DVD from Network
and the 1970 Mel Brooks version of which, incidentally, I've just
acquired), MEMORIES OF UNDERDEVELOPMENT (1968), THE LAST SUPPER (1976)
and the Oscar nominated STRAWBERRY AND CHOCOLATE (1994); the local DVD
shop has the latter available for rental and, as a result of this
positive experience with Cuban cinema, I will certainly be giving it a
spin one of these days
Death of a Bureaucratic, 20 March 2012
![]()
Author:
lashleym from United States
Tomas Gutierrez Alea, Death of a Bureaucratic, Cuba, 1966
In a time of struggle between the United States and Cuba, when film was
forbidden to leave Cuba, Tomas Gutierrez Alea managed to smuggle his
Death of a Bureaucratic from his country. This great feat allowed
Americans to view a Cuban's cinematography and also his satirical
perspective of Cuban society under the reign of Castro. I believe that
Alea did a wonderful job of showing how society and government worked
during that time by using humor to depict a dark time. There was much
symbolism present and foreshadowing. Since he was successful in turning
otherwise disturbing situations into humorous ones, I think he could
catch a broader audience and allow them to gain a small view of the
situation in Cuba.
As the basis of the film, I believe that Alea was trying to show the
government in the time of Castro rule. The Death of a Bureaucratic is a
very fitting title to show this theme. Throughout the film there are
scenes of artists' artwork advertising the smashing of bureaucracy. The
overseer of the art was constantly critiquing his artists' works,
telling them that the biceps needed to be much larger. Was this an
attempt to portray that one must flex their muscles in order to appear,
and not necessarily be, stronger and mightier? That Cuba or Castro was
stronger and mightier than anyone else? Also, I believe that the major
component of showing government in that time was how the nephew had to
jump through so many hoops in order to obtain a simple document. First,
he needed Paco's work card (for which he had been buried with). Then
after unearthing Paco illegally, he had to get the same paperwork to
bury him again. The humorous and frustrating parts were how many people
and departments that the nephew had to see and go through in order to
receive the approval to bury his uncle again. A funny part showing the
regime of Castro was when one office worker was distributing a set
amount of toilet paper to another. I thought it amusing and a good way
to show how stringent and strict the government was.
There was a multitude of symbolism. I question the importance of
beginning and ending the film with the sculpted angel in the cemetery.
Paco was a sculptor and part of the story's theme was based on death
burying Paco, unearthing him, trying to rebury him and the demise of
his nephew. Was the angel just a theatrical addition or possibly one
showing the death of two souls? The sculptures also come into play that
Paco was attempting to create a bust of Castro for every family in
Cuba. In the end, that came to the demise of Paco and his nephew.
Death was highly prevalent in some obscure and obvious ways. I thought
it funny that outside the first office the nephew enters, to get the
needed approval, there is a man sitting with a scythe. Then the waiter
has fangs at the restaurant where the nephew comes to an agreement with
the cemetery crew to help him open his uncle's casket. Another amusing
aspect that I noticed was that the mortician had a skeleton hanging in
his rear-view mirror. The blackbirds that the nephew kept seeing, I
believe, foreshadowed his impending demise and kept with a theme of
death.
As far as the cinematography, there were many elements I thought
interesting. The one that stood out most to me was when Paco's machine
malfunctioned and he was attempting to fix it. That scene differed from
the rest of the movie. It was cartoon-like. The accelerated motion
added to this element. That scene reminded me of movies during Charlie
Chaplin's time when there was no sound and the actors were
over-dramatic in order to express the emotion and events in the film. I
thought the transitions between scenes were defined and effective. It
seemed to me that they were close to what we see in movies today.
Alea's choice of score blended in to where I didn't feel that it
overpowered the shot or effectiveness of the acting and film but was
rather mostly an enhancement.
A review from IMDb.com references the dream sequences used by Alea.
They make reference that these are similar to those of Bunnel. Said
dream sequences baffled me. There was an homage made to Alea's friend,
Dali, when the nephew, Juanchin, was pulling the coffin. This was a
sign of carrying a heavy weight or baggage. Although the dreams were a
prominent part in the film, I found them confusing and creepy.
All in all, I believe that Alea's Death of a Bureaucratic was a
humorous portrayal of the darker time under Castro's rule.
| Plot summary | Ratings | Awards |
| External reviews | Plot keywords | Main details |
| Your user reviews | Your vote history |