Surfers Chase Freedom in Cuba
Havana Libre tells the story of Cuba’s underground surfers struggling to practice their sport.
HD DownloadIn the new documentary Havana Libre, filmmaker Corey McLean follows a community of Cuban surfers who refuse to abandon their sport despite police harassment, government bureaucracy, and being shut off from the international surfer community.
"If you want to feel something and understand Cuba, you just need to get to know these characters going about their lives, trying to pursue something that they love and seeing how difficult it is," says McLean. "Cuba has had this really difficult relationship with the water. The Cuban government essentially made the water off limits to all of its people unless expressly given permission for it. To try and develop a sport in that space is already really difficult. The fact that it's primarily a Western sport is also not particularly appealing to the government there. And so, together, those reasons basically forced surfing to be this underground sort of invisible sport."
Throughout the film, protagonists Frank Gonzales Guerra and Yaya Guerrero grapple with both their Communist government and the American embargo in an attempt to advance the sport they love.
"You see how much chaos politics can cause in day-to-day life," says McLean. "Everything is connected to politics. And so for them, surfing is really this ability to just release all of that. And so when they say they're constantly trying to escape politics, all they want to do is live in this peaceful lifestyle that they see people around the world being a part of. This film is sort of about how difficult that simple task is."
Havana Libre is now streaming on Amazon, Apple TV, and elsewhere.
Photo Credits: Ernesto Mastrascusa/EFE/Newscom; ABACAUSA.COM/
Music Credits: "Darkness," by onyx-music via Artlist
Produced and edited by Meredith Bragg
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Until the napalm fucks up the wind and waves.
Too calming, I expect.
I've peaked a few times and you haven't been a complete dick. You requested I mute you. Do you want to remain cool like JesseAz, Mother's Lament, and the rest of our intellectual powerhouses, or do you want me to take you off mute? It's up to you.
Bud, do what you want, I will tweak you every time you deserve it. You went on and on about only muting people who begged you, so I begged you, what the hell. I didn't give a shit then, and don't give a shit now, whether you respond or not, because you are a hypocrite who says one thing and does another, brags about things you don't do, pretend you do things you don't do, and conversations with you are an oxymoron.
you are a hypocrite who says one thing and does another, brags about things you don't do, pretend you do things you don't do, and conversations with you are an oxymoron.
Oh my god you're one of the girls! It's so cute!
So does this mean that I'm wrong about immigration because I peaked when I had someone on mute?
Oh, oh, I must be wrong about economics because I replied to someone I said I had on mute!
It's peeked.
The other peaked is for trippin'...
Good catch. Dang. Haven't done that since the last century.
As I said ... "conversations with you are an oxymoron".
Conversations about me aren't going to end well. With me is a different matter.
Let's start over.
I made a reference to Apocalypse Now. I saw a muted response from you and I figured how could someone make a personal insult out of that so I read it. Then I wondered if you were responding for the benefit of the troll community, or if you wanted a conversation. So I asked.
Perhaps your low awareness is Reason's fault. There is nothing in your posts that says you have muted me, and there can't be -- it would only be valid at that instant. When I respond to a comment, I seldom even notice who made it, it doesn't matter -- I respond to the comment, not the commenter. Obviously you care far more the opposite. Sucks to be you.
I respond to the comment, not the commenter.
If so then I will cheerfully take you off mute.
Obviously you care far more the opposite.
No, that's the people I have on mute.
The Cuban government essentially made the water off limits to all of its people unless expressly given permission for it.
I guess they're afraid that too many Cubans would surf themselves towards America's notorious porous borders and make the Cuban system look bad?
Instead, Cubans figure out how to get to Central America, and then buy a bus ticket for the Texas border.
Having lived in Miami for 4 years, its amazing to me that the Cuban government should achieve that. Cubans (at least the ones that got to Miami) absolutely love and are obsessed with fishing, the beach and the boats.
Great healthcare, though.
Another falsehood propagated by the Cuban government I’m afraid. Their free healthcare is paper thin and rather decrepit. Many sources in that if one is curious. Chalk another failure up to communism.
Let the surfers surf and brag to the world about how large your “Navy” is.
What does that mean?
The Cuban navy?
They can’t let the surfers go surfing whenever they like.
It’s a communist dictatorship.
Everything not specifically allowed is forbidden.