``Under current policy, individuals require a specific license to engage in travel-related transactions involving Cuba and additional transactions that are directly incident to participation in public performances and exhibitions,'' he said. “This policy extends to the Havana film festival.''
Alfredo Guevara leads the organizing committee for the Cuban government sponsored festival. He says they chose films designed to spotlight Latino communities in the United States, but did not otherwise seek out films made in the United States.
In all, the festival features more than 500 films from 14 countries. Brazil is the best-represented with 34 full-length movies, while Argentina, France, Spain, and México are also key contributors.
Other directors also blamed the visa delays for their absence. British director Wash Westmoreland said he won't be on-hand with his U.S. film “Quinceañera” because he didn't find out it would be shown in Havana until it was too late to get permission for his co-director Richard Glatzer to travel to Cuba.
“Richard holds an American passport and there's not enough time to get apply to get a cultural visa,'' Westmoreland said. “It’s something we were really excited about doing. I wish we could have.''
One of those who will attend is Mexican director Patricia Riggen, whose U.S.-Mexico border film, “La Misma Luna” reportedly netted a whopping $5 million distribution deal at the Sundance Film Festival.
Lesnik Weisman also works as a journalist and can travel on a general media license and without advance permission from the U.S. government. Her documentary, filmed in Havana and Miami, tells the story of her father, Max Lesnik, who was a friend of Fidel Castro before heading into exile in South Florida following a spat over Cuba’s ties to the Soviet Union.
Max Lesnik is still a critic of Castro, but has remained close to Cuba's government and an opponent of the U.S. embargo—a position that prompted anti-Castro Cubans in Miami to harass their family.
Born in Cuba, the filmmaker says she grew up in the U.S. amid explosions and drive-by shootings as political opponents targeted her father.
``It shows courage, forward thinking and openness in what is considered a closed society,'' Lesnik Weisman said of Cuba’s decision to show her movie. “It’s hard to know how Cuban audiences will react.''
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