Chico and Rita
Chico and Rita is a 2010 Spanish adult animated music romantic film with Spanish and English languages directed by Tono Errando, Fernando Trueba and Javier Mariscal.[6] The story of Chico and Rita is set against backdrops of Havana, New York City, Las Vegas, Los Angeles and Paris in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Chico is a young piano player with big dreams. Rita is a beautiful singer with an extraordinary voice. Music and romantic desire unite them, but their journey—in the tradition of the Latin ballad, the bolero—brings heartache and torment. The film was produced by Fernando Trueba Producciones, Estudio Mariscal, and Magic Light Pictures. It received financing from CinemaNX and Isle of Man Film.[1][2] It won the Goya Award for Best Animated Film at the 25th Goya Awards and was nominated for the Oscar for Best Animated Feature at the 84th Academy Awards (the first nomination for a Spanish full-length animated film).
Chico and Rita | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Fernando Trueba Javier Mariscal Tono Errando |
Produced by | Santi Errando Cristina Huete Michael Rose Martin Pope |
Screenplay by | Fernando Trueba Ignacio Martínez de Pisón |
Story by | Fernando Trueba Ignacio Martínez de Pisón |
Music by | Bebo Valdés |
Edited by | Arnau Quiles |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Spain Icon Film Distribution (United Kingdom) |
Release date |
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Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | Spain[1][2] United Kingdom Canada France Isle of Man[1][2][3] Hungary[1][2] Philippines[1][2] |
Language | Spanish English French |
Budget | €10 million[4] |
Box office | $2.2 million[5] |
Plot
In present-day Havana, Chico, a shoe-shiner, tunes his radio to the Radio Progreso station, which is playing old Cuban hits on a program called Melodies from Yesterday. As he listens, the station begins to play a romantic arrangement of A Taste of Me (Sabor a Mí) by Mexican composer Álvaro Carrillo (1921–69) which causes him to remember his life back in 1940s Cuba. In 1948 Havana, Chico and his best friend Ramón are struggling dandies in a low-life bar. Ramon arranges a double date for the both of them with two American tourists. They take the women to a bar where Chico falls in love with the band's beautiful lead singer, Rita. Chico attempts to talk to her, but an American tourist refuses to let Rita leave him.
Chico and Ramón go to the Tropicana Club with their lady-friends, and sneak in through the performer's entrance. While walking around, Chico sees upon Rita and her gentleman friend arguing. The Maitre d' overhears that Chico is an accomplished pianist and persuades him to substitute for the main event's missing pianist. Chico fills in, playing at first sight a new piece—Ebony Concerto by Igor Stravinsky. Chico, initially nervous, ends up performing the piece with aplomb, to the delight of the band. Rita finally agrees to ditch her date and flee with Chico on Ramón's motorcycle and sidecar, along with the Americans.
After a dangerous chase, the American man finally crashes into a car dealership, and the others escape. Rita and Chico leave the rest of the party and go to a bar where Chico introduces her to bebop music, which she takes up quickly. Afterwards they go to Chico's place and have sex together. The next day Rita wakes up to find Chico playing a new composition on the piano, which he names "Rita". As they play and kiss, Juana, Chico's former girlfriend, walks in and picks a fight with Rita. The two women angrily leave Chico, feeling betrayed. However, Chico is still smitten with Rita and begs Ramon to convince her to perform with him for an upcoming radio contest. Ramon pays Rita to sing with Chico but after the contest, Rita leaves Chico without speaking to him. He follows her to the house of a santera, who predicts that Chico will cause her much suffering.
That night, the station announces that Chico and Rita have won a month's engagement at the Hotel Nacional. A few weeks later, Chico and Rita are having great success in their performances. Rita's beauty mesmerizes all the men, which ignites Chico's jealousy. One of the admirers, Ron, asks Rita to his table to discuss business. He offers to take Rita to New York City to make her a star, where jazz and Latin music are a burgeoning scene. However, Rita insists that the offer must include Chico. Meanwhile, Chico has been watching from a distance and becomes jealous, believing Rita wishes to leave him for Ron. Rita attempts to explain that she is fighting for both of them to go to New York together, but Chico storms off. Rita goes to his apartment and waits for Chico, but falls asleep in the courtyard. She is awakened by Chico stumbling home with Juana. Hurt, Rita agrees to go to New York with Ron, alone.
After her departure, Chico becomes depressed and he and Ramon eventually secure the means to go to New York to seek their fortunes as well. Chico and Ramón give Chano Pozo a letter of recommendation they received from his sister in Cuba. Chano is receptive and excited to meet fellow Cubans. However, he is involved in drugs and has a short temper. After discovering he was sold oregano instead of marijuana, Chano attacks the dealer, who later finds him in a bar and kills him. Chico finds work as a party musician, and Ramón as an usher at the Plaza Hotel. At one of his party gigs, Chico runs into a successful Rita again, who is hurt by the racist doubts of her fellow party goers about her upcoming film project.
Chico and Rita run away in her new car and spend the night together again. The next day, Ron locates Ramón and proposes a deal to finance his artist-agency business, as long as Ramon finds jobs to keep Chico away from Rita. Ramón complies with his end of the bargain and signs Chico with Dizzy Gillespie, who gives him a gig in Paris and a European tour. Rita becomes a big film star while Chico finds a new girlfriend in Paris. One morning, while playing "Rita" at the piano, the girlfriend's dog, Lily, comes in and sits by Chico. He decides to change the name of the song to "Lily". Back in New York, despite her wealth and success, Rita is still mistreated socially due to her skin color. While being driven to a set, the radio plays a new Jazz hit that she instantly recognizes as the piece Chico composed for her. She is moved to tears when she learns Chico renamed the song. In New York, Rita goes into a bar and sees Chico playing "Lily".
She waits for him outside the bar and demands to know who Lilly is. He teases her about the mystery female's identity, but finally reveals that he renamed the song after a dog. The two passionately kiss and make up. A paparazzo captures the kiss in a photograph that appears in the newspapers. Chico and Rita agree to marry that New Year's Eve, after Rita's debut in Las Vegas. Chico tells Ramón, who worries that their reunion will ruin his business. Ramón slips a packet of drugs into Chico's coat, which police discover during a search after a raid on his gig at the Palladium in New York. They arrest Chico, and won't let him make a phone call to Rita, who waits in vain in a Las Vegas motel. Chico is soon deported back to Cuba. Upset, Rita becomes drunk before her New Year's Eve performance, believing that Chico left her again. Despite Ron's urging to not "spoil it all now", Rita deliberately sabotages her career by denouncing the racism of the Hollywood industry and the hypocrisy of being a celebrated black artist.
Meanwhile, Chico enters Cuba right at the beginning of Castro's regime, and the new Cuban revolutionary authorities seize his passport. All venues are now forbidden to play jazz because it is "imperialist music." Disappointed with life, Chico gives up music altogether.
Forty-seven years later, when Chico is shining shoes for a tourist, a young man rushes to him and tells him that a famous young singer and her entourage are eagerly asking for him and his jazz music. He reluctantly agrees to meet them and for the first time in years he plays his music for an audience. The singer asks him to record a song with her and Chico agrees. It becomes a big hit and takes him on a world tour, giving him success for the second time. After the tour, Chico is allowed re-entry into the United States. He searches for Rita, starting in New York. He eventually finds Ron in a nursing home, discovers that his friend Ramón has died, and learns Rita now lives in Las Vegas. He meets her at the same motel she stayed at 47 years prior. She reveals that she has been living there this entire time, working as its housekeeper and waiting for him. The film ends with their reunion.
Cast
- Limara Meneses
- Eman Xor Oña
- Mario Guerra
- Jon Adams
- Renny Arozarena
- Blanca Rosa Blanco
- Jackie de la Nuez
- Rigoberto Ferrera
- Ken Forman
- Ray Gillon
- Steve Harper
- Lenny Mandel
- Jorge Ryan
- Claudia Valdés
- Ashley Albert
- Tracey Ayer
- Carlos Cabal
- Wendy Dillon
- Kathy Fitzgerald
- Luis Alberto García
- Mark Anthony Henry
- Kerin McCue
- Miriam Socarras
- Peter Appel
- Jay Benedict
- Luis Enrique Carreres
- Aleida Enríquez
- Carlos Ever Fonseca
- Eddy Calderón
- Alexis González
- David Kramer
- Estrella Morente
- Diana Preisler
- Isabelle Stoffel
- Gladys Zurbano
Collaborators
Director Fernando Trueba met designer and artist Javier Mariscal ten years earlier when he asked him to create a poster for his Latin jazz documentary Calle 54.[7] So began a collaboration that saw Mariscal design all the artwork for Trueba's Calle 54 Records, make animated pop promos for the label, and together create a jazz-music restaurant in Madrid. Chico & Rita would be Javier Mariscal's first animated feature film as designer. The idea to make an animated feature film emerged from one of those pop promos, La Negra Tomasa by Cuban musician Compay Segundo. Mariscal's younger brother Tono Errando, with a background in music, film and animation, leads the audio-visual side of the multi-disciplinary creative company, and was chosen to collaborate with Trueba and Mariscal. From the beginning, all three men were excited by the idea of making a film set against the Havana music scene in the late-40s and 50s. "That age is beautiful in design and architecture, so visually it belongs very much to Mariscal's world," says Errando. "And in music it's a moment that's fantastic: it's the moment where Cuban musicians go to New York and join the Anglo Saxon jazz musicians. This fusion changed the music at that time."
Production
Before drawing the locations in Cuba, Mariscal completed an intense research trip. Although many of Havana's pre-revolutionary buildings had decayed, either deliberately or from neglect, the filmmakers discovered that the Havana city government had assembled an archive of photographs to help with street repairs. Pictures of every street corner in Havana since 1949 were archived, conveying the look and mood of the era. The team also found pictures taken inside the planes ferrying Americans to the party island. Mariscal explained that the planes arriving from New York, Washington, D.C. and Miami during that period were filled with Cuban musicians entertaining the passengers. They provided much historical information about the Cubans of that era: the clothes, the faces, the streets, billboards, cars, bars, the way they lived, and the sensational life of Havana.
Release
Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures distributed the film in 100 Spanish theaters on 25 February 2010.[4] GKIDS holds the distribution rights for the film in North America.[8] The film has also been shown at the following festivals and released in the UK and Spain. The English dub will include the voices of Wendell Pierce, Mary J. Blige, Rob Riggle, Chris Pine, and Viola Davis.
Film festivals
- Bradford Animation Festival (UK) on 9 November 2010
- Telluride Film Festival on 4 September 2010[9]
- Toronto International Film Festival in September 2010[10]
- London Spanish Film festival on 6 October 2010[11]
- London Latin American Film Festival in November 2010[12]
- Holland Animation Film Festival in November 2010[13][14]
- Cape Town Design/FilmFest at Design Indaba February 2011[15]
- Miami International Film Festival March 2011[16]
- TYPO Berlin 2011 Design Conference on 19 May[17]
- Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival (opening gala show) in September 2011
- Sonoma County Cuban Film Festival, Sebastopol, CA in July 2015
Reception
Chico & Rita has an approval rating of 87% on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 71 reviews, and an average rating of 7.60/10. The website's critical consensus states, "Aimed at adults and animated with zest, Chico & Rita is a romantic delight packed with cultural detail and flavor".[18] It also has a score of 76 out of 100 on Metacritic, based on 27 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[19]
The BBC's Mark Kermode listed the film fifth in his top five films of 2010.[20] Philip French called the film "the year's best musical and one of the year's finest animated films" and an "utterly delightful, ...affecting, funny, historically accurate and at times pleasingly erotic story",[21] while Sounds and Colors called the film "a crowning achievement; a mixture of great animation, music and history with a narrative that reads like the simple story of heartbreak that bestows the greatest of love songs."[22] In March 2011, The Miami Herald said "the film melds dazzling visuals and a wildly infectious score into a simple yet affecting love story" and while the "first 30 minutes of Chico & Rita achieve a giddy high the rest of the movie can never match", "Chico & Rita makes you fall hard for music, as hard as the protagonists fall for each other, and the movie is decent enough to give its lovebirds the tender finale they deserve."[16] Fotogramas, the oldest and most prestigious film magazine in Spain, gave the film 4 out of 5 stars and praised how its characters were "more human and alive than many real actors",[23] unlike Variety, which negatively reviewed the film, calling it, "...a test, one that gauges whether your love of Cuban jazz can exceed your threshold for lousy animation... [in] an unflattering style, like a children's coloring book with its rudimentary line drawings and stiff, expressionless characters." The film was "...evocative enough of late-'40s Havana and the sweaty, sensual music of the time."[9]
Accolades
Award | Date of ceremony | Category | Recipient(s) | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
Academy Awards[24] | 26 February 2012 | Best Animated Feature | Fernando Trueba Javier Mariscal |
Nominated |
Annie Awards[25] | 4 February 2012 | Best Animated Feature | Nominated | |
European Film Awards[26] | 3 December 2011 | Best Animated Feature Film | Tono Errando Fernando Trueba Javier Mariscal |
Won |
Festival of European Animated Feature Films and TV Specials[27] | 19 June 2011 | Hungarian National Student Jury Award | Fernando Trueba Javier Mariscal Tono Errando |
Won |
Goya Awards[28] | 13 February 2011 | Best Animated Film | Fernando Trueba Javier Mariscal |
Won |
Music
The film has an original soundtrack by Cuban pianist, bandleader and composer Bebo Valdés. It features music by Thelonious Monk, Cole Porter, Dizzy Gillespie and Freddy Cole. According to Tono Errando, "it was the moment when new musicians came along like Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie with a new kind of music, that is not for dancing, full of notes, played really fast, a music that now we call jazz. Then the Cuban musicians arrived. Dizzy Gillespie has said many times in interviews, there was a moment for him that was very important, it was the moment he first played with Chano Pozo. Pozo was the first percussionist that played in a jazz band."[29] Cuban pianist, bandleader, composer and arranger of the film Bebo Valdés was living in obscurity in Stockholm, when Trueba reintroduced his playing to an international audience with his film Calle 54, and went on to produce the Grammy-winning Lagrimas Negras album, teaming Valdes with flamenco singer Diego 'el Cigala'. Trueba was also able to persuade the real-life flamenco star Estrella Morente, who has been performing since the age of seven, to participate in the film. Musicians featured in the film include Chucho Valdés, Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Chano Pozo, Tito Puente, Ben Webster, and Thelonious Monk.
See also
References
- "Chico and Rita wins 2011 European Film Award, earns Best Animated Feature Nomination at Annies 2012". Isle of Man Guide. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
- "Animation Chico and Rita wins European film award". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
- "Chico and Rita (Animated Feature)". Isle of Man Film. Isle of Man Government. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
- De Pablos, Emiliano (1 December 2010). "Disney takes 'Chico and Rita' for Spain". Variety. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
- "Chico & Rita (2012)". Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
- Chico & Rita at the Big Cartoon DataBase
- Dossier Calle 54 Club. Issuu (17 February 2010). Retrieved on 2011-03-11.
- Graser, Marc (25 January 2012). "GKids makes splash with two in toon pool". Variety.
- Debruge, Peter (10 September 2010). "Chico and Rita". Variety. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
- "2010 Films – Chico & Rita". Toronto International Film Festival. 21 July 2010. Archived from the original on 1 December 2010. Retrieved 11 March 2011.
- Chico y Rita, London Spanish film festival, 2010, archived from the original on 4 September 2010
- "The Best Annual Latin American Film Festival in London celebrates its 20th edition in November 2010", The London Latin American Film Festival, retrieved 11 March 2011
- Winners, The Holland Animation Film Festival, archived from the original on 8 December 2015, retrieved 6 May 2011
- "The Holland Animation Film Festival 2010: Chico and Rita steal the show", Phaidon Press (article), UK, 10 November 2010, archived from the original on 10 September 2012
- Filmfest 2011, Design Indaba, retrieved 11 March 2011
- "Falling in love in Havana – and all that jazz". The Miami Herald. 4 March 2011. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
- "Estudio Mariscal and Chico & Rita, an animated movie". Typo Berlin 2011 Shift. 19 May 2011. Archived from the original on 2 October 2011. Retrieved 9 July 2011.
- Chico & Rita, Rotten Tomatoes, retrieved 10 April 2011
- https://www.metacritic.com/movie/chico-rita
- Kermode Uncut: My Top Five Films of the Year on YouTube. Accessed 2011-4-10.
- French, Philip (21 November 2010). "Chico & Rita". The Observer (review). London. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
- Chico and Rita (review), Sounds & Colours, 19 November 2010
- Chico y Rita (review), ES: Fotogramas
- "Oscars 2012: Nominees in full". BBC News. Retrieved 24 January 2012.
- Vary, Adam B. (5 December 2011). "'Kung Fu Panda 2,' 'Puss in Boots,' 'Rango' lead Annie award nominations". Entertainment Weekly. Time. Retrieved 5 December 2011.
- The 24th European film awards winners, European film academy, 3 December 2011
- Európai Animációs Játékfilm Fesztivál, HU: Kecskeméti Animációs Filmfesztivál, 2011
- "Ganadores", Premios Goya [Goya awards], Academia de cine
- Trueba, Fernando PCSA (3 October 2010). "Chico & Rita – Pressbook" (PDF). Estudio Mariscal, Magic Light Pictures, IOM. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 March 2012. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Chico and Rita |
- Chico and Rita – official site (UK)
- Chico and Rita – official site (USA)
- Chico and Rita – official site (Spain)
- Chico and Rita at Magic Light Pictures
- Chico and Rita at BBC Programmes
- Chico and Rita at The Big Cartoon DataBase
- Chico and Rita at IMDb
- Chico and Rita at Rotten Tomatoes
- Chico and Rita on YouTube – interview between Mark Kermode and director Fernando Trueba at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival
- Chico and Rita video review of the film by Mark Kermode at the BBC