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talking about new movies on cubavision . the last one from Mel Gibson , Jan 29 2010 release, Edge of Darkness just started on Cubavision tonight. enjoy it.

HD Fan,

Not that I can attest to the quality of that specific movie(I haven't seen it yet), but it is certainly cool that Cubavision offers these very NEW movies. I see a lot of new releases listed on their website. It is difficult for me to read and comprehend every movie that they list as their guide is in Spanish, but I can make out the release dates and the movie titles are in cap's or boldface type, so I can translate them fairly easily.

It's a little toublesome to determine the actual broadcast time, however. They list about five or so movies back to back, but only list the start time of the very first one and the end time of the very last. I wasn't sure how to judge the start and end time of one of the movies in the middle.

I tried to calculate it from the listed duration of the movie (barring any commercial breaks), but that day was one of the very windy days when my dish blew off course and nothing got recorded due to the loss of signal, so I never figured out the time line for their movie schedule.

RADAR
 
what receiver for hisp 30W?

HI all

i really wnat to get some hd channel from Uruguay in Hispasat 30 w, in ku. can these channels works with a winegard dish 32" and what kind of receiver i need to see these channels.

any comments really thanks manny
 
Them HD channels on both birds at 30w look to be encrypted, so you won't be able to view them

DVB-S2
MPEG-4/HD
Nagravision 3
 
pro96

really thanks for ur thread about these channels, because a hd box really cost a lot of money.

manny
 
There are no HD channels on Hispasat on the American beams , maybe on the European beams there are. The Uruguayan mux although is DVB-S2 8PSK MPEG4 it is NOT HD , it is PAL SD since Argentina and Uruguay uses PAL. My CS 8100 reports it wrongly as HD since it is MPEG4.

Radar you should follow the duration time of the movies and take into account that Cuba always broadcast full credits at normal speed (instead like the canadian CTV just to mention one of them , that shows them at high speed and very small fonts and never the full credits). Also between movies and programs in general although there are no comercial ads in Cuba , there are indeed political, educational or general interest and Cubavision own programming ads. therefore allow up to 3 minutes for this at the end of every program. In general programs in Cuba end at either 3:27 or 3:57 with 3 minutes for ads. A Castro speech used to disrupt this fixed schedule , good thing his brother does not like to talk that much lol.

The first Saturday movie religiously has always been US made and a new Release in Cuba with just very rare exceptions through out the year. The rest of the Saturday night movies are repeats but in general US made and usually thrillers or action or suspense movies. Classics or movies with high cultural or cinema value, US made or not, are showed during the week with a commentary pre-show by well known movie critics who analize the movie and its value. not really intended for moviemakers or cinema students (although the general population like me almost never watched the critic comment the movie, lol, couse I could not understand much) but those shows acctually analize the movies from a somehow higly advanced and cinema related point of view.

In general they write EST for Estreno or new Release.
REP for Reposición or Repeat.

Drama fro Dramatic movies
Act for Action movie
Susp for Suspense

As a rule the first Sat night movie should start at 10:10 pm because there is a show called Este Dia or This day that describes historical events that happened this day years ago either in Cuba or International, kind of on lets say Sat July 4 they mention that it is Independence Day in US and talk breifly about it. sometimes the news or El Noticiero at 8 pm runs longer than normal, 30 min, and therefore it disrupts the schedule.

I beleive there is also a late news show , very brief acctually between the first and second movie that I do not think has a fixed duration (it depends on the news of the day) therefore it makes no sense to have a fixed schedule for saturday night since it is made 1 week ahead.

Foreing shows always carry Foreing language Close Caption if they originally had it and US made shows or movies are the ones that usually have close caption. Foreing programming of any nature is preferably broadcast in the original language unless it was a US show recorded or taken from lets say a TV station from Spain in that case the audio is with Spanish actors made in Spain. Cuba in general do not translate the programming with Spanish audio although there are some exceptions like Discovery documentaries. Cuba used to subtitle the movies and shows in general years agobut I have noticed that more often than I want nowadays they are previously subtitled by another Spanish Speaking country. In that case at the beggining of the show or movie there is a warning screen advicing the viewer that unfortunalelly Cuba can not warrant the quality of the subtitles (and usually those have a lot of grammar errors). In my opinion subtitles made in Cuba were and still are very high quality with a cero tolerance policy for grammar errors. You could argue the translation in some cases is not the best one though , but at least it is written in proper spanish grammar. Movie titles also are usually not an exact translation into Spanish , no idea why?. Translations and subtitles in Cuba (unlike powerfull networks like CBC just to mention 1 again) are made by a specialist or in other words English translators and also an Spanish Corrector. I remember recently a CBC documentary about a dissident in Cuba , it was made in Cuba with a non professional camera and that is understandable (cuban authorities would have not allow it) but I could not finish watching it since in my opinion the English tranalation was Unaceptable!!!!. Beleive me non of that would have happened in Cuba. Another example are the translators for the Canadian prime minister , from french into english and viceversa. True I know nothing of french for an expert opinion but I will never forget the 2 tranalators that Castro had when he was in power ("el cojo" or the old limp man and the new one , several years now, a woman who I do not recall her name). The old limp man I beleive even studied in a US university back in the 40's or maybe 50's and what still impress me about both of them is that they even enfazise the and show you the same mood that Castro has when he speaks. Lets say Castro speaks slowly or quietly then they do the same but if Castro suddenly changes the rithum or "ritmo" or speaks loudly or angry they will even talk that way so you get Castros mood in English as well.

Over here to listen to a translator from any major Canadian network (I should point out that unlike Cuba , the prime minister apparently does not have its own translator and therefore the network has to hire one) is like listening to a Gol description on a soccer game by a Canadian Sport network. In other words, is like making love to your woman but without feeling anything let alone the orgasm at the end. Under the Cuban and in general latinamerican sexual standards , totally Unaceptable!!!! lol.

Hope this "trova" or long talk help you enjoy the movies. BTW I am still waiting for Filadelfia , the AIDS related movie, to be shown in Cuba. It was supossed to be shown on a Thursday night so many years ago I remember but incredibly , just before the movie was supposed to start , a last minute presentator on a last minute tv set without even the proper lighting suddenly said we are sorry but the ONE AND ONLY copy that they had of the movie just broke a few minutes ago so we are unable to show it tonight . They said they will try to re-schedule it but I think to this day , still it has not been shown in Cuba , unbeleivable!!!!!. At the time AIDS was treated like another state secret in cuba and maybe the talk on the street when people realized they were going to show it pompted some burocrat or member of the communist party to cancel it last minute with such and incredible excuse. Well it is called comunism, lol , I laugh but it is not funny, lol.

Cheers
 
HD FAN,
Thanks for the running commentary on the movies, I was just watching a war movie with Sean Connery on Cubavision, and I do enjoy reading your comments on Cuba.

PBS did a series on two Cuban sisters that were ballerinas, one immigrated to the US and the other sister stayed in Cuba and became the head of the Cuban Ballet. The sister from the US was allowed to visit after thirty years it was a very interesting story.
Mike Lib
 
I saw that one on PBS mikelib (I have my Bell 9242 set up to record anything that says Cuba on the description and as a result I have watched very interesting stuff about Cuba that me and most cubans are not aware off, for instance a cuban croco is the only one in the world able to jump up to 6-7 feet off the river using his big tail and catch a prey (mostly a Jutia, kind of a very big rat) off the tree branches).

Last night movie (A Bridge Too Far, translated by Cuba as Operacion Market Garden and IDK why they usually do this , rename the movie with something that tells the story instead of the straight translation of the title) showed by Eduardo Galeano (in most people opinions the best cuban movie critic alive) in its now eternal movie show Historia del Cine (History of Cinema) was a War Movie Classic and like I said before such movies are not shown on Saturday night but rather on this kind of specific movie shows with a pre-movie commentary by a movie critic. As is also typical in this cases, the commentator Eduardo Galeano took the oportunity to point out that the movie fails to recognize the important roll that the Soviet Red Army also played during WW II although he mentioned that Eisenghower himself at the time publicly recognize it. This was just a brief opinion (that me being cuban I am used to expect always something like this) and the rest of the talk was about the values of the movie from a cinema critic point of view.

Too bad I had no HDD big enough to record the movie last night , was surfing the channels and ran into it and just saw the initial credits. There were like 10 very good high quality US actors and actresses on the movie and when a director manage to gather such people together for a movie the screenplay and story has to be excellent. There are a couple more movie shows like this on weeknights run by different commentators. I think the commentator kind of has the "freedom" to choose the movies that he thinks suits its show and therefore if you want movie classics Galeano's Historia del Cine will not dissapoint you. There is another old one on Sunday afternoon , (Tanda del Domingo) nowadays run by the wife (you see the trend here , power always stays within the family lol, no different from a religious order lol) of another famous commentator that also became a documentary director I think , but that one is mostly family oriented movies or comedies or the likes.

There are two things the Americans do better than anyone in the world, one of them is the movies , therefore in such movie shows in Cuba , most movies are almost always US made. Enjoy it.
 
Mikelib this is the story of the ballerinas show we saw on PBS. Mirror Dance is titled and was produced by Independent Lens. BTW the sister that stayed in Cuba did not become the head of the Cuban ballet since the head is and probably will always be , even after death , Prima Ballerina Assoluta Alicia Alonso ( I do not like this kind of god sacred treatment either but after talking about Cuban Ballet and Alicia Alonso in particular with Foreing Classic Dancers I kind of start appreciating why in Cuba she is treated like a god). The sister became the head of the School of Cuban Ballet which is by far a very important roll since it guarantees the furure generation of high quality dancers (New York ballet fans probably remember names like Jose Manuel Carreño and Carlos Acosta who untill recently were members of the American Ballet Theater, dancers retire at 35 I think). For more info on the documentary read along.

MIRROR DANCE is the story of Cuban-born identical twins Ramona and Margarita de Saá, who become estranged through politics when one moves to the United States and the other remains behind. Though separated for almost 40 years, both continue to share a passion for dance. Shot in the United States and Cuba over a period of four years, the film reveals some of the complexities of the sisters’ relationship: the worlds in which they live, the choices each has made and the conflicts each has endured. Set within the context of the turbulent dynamic between the two countries, MIRROR DANCE focuses on the twins’ story of division, difference and ongoing efforts at reconciliation. It is a universal story that speaks to the personal pain, loss and waste that can result from international hostilities.
Ramona and Margarita knew they wanted to be ballerinas. At age 11, they were dancing with prima ballerina Alicia Alonso and were being mentored by master teacher Fernando Alonso. Enter the 1959 Cuban Revolution. Fidel Castro pledged a strong commitment to the arts, especially ballet, a commitment that continues to this day.
Margarita flourished in the system, rising through the ranks from corps de ballet to prima ballerina. She married John White, an American who was recruited by Alicia Alonso to dance with the newly formed National Ballet of Cuba. Ramona married Santiago Bello, one of Castro’s close associates.
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The Cuban revolution


Using old family photographs and archival footage of their days as young dancers in Havana, including footage of Margarita performing in Enrique Pineda Barnet’s film Giselle, MIRROR DANCE introduces viewers to the sisters and their worlds. In addition, archival and Super 8 footage recalls Havana in the turbulent ’50s and early ’60s when the twins were growing up, during their respective courtships and marriages and through the political events leading up to their dramatic separation. A soundtrack that mixes original music composed by Cuban-born Elio Villafranca with traditional ballet music further evokes the era.
Following their marriages, the twins began to grow apart. In 1964, concerned about the changing political environment, Margarita, her infant son and her husband—now a ballet master—made the painful decision to leave their life, careers and family in Cuba. Ramona remained in Havana. A self-described “revolutionary woman,” she was dismayed by her twin’s lack of commitment to the revolution. Believing Margarita was a traitor, Ramona refused to have contact with her.
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Margarita at her Academy of Ballet in Philadelphia

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Ramona at the National School of Ballet in Cuba

Top photos, L-R:
On tour with the National Ballet of Cuba

Margarita and Ramona are reunited

The twins with their first-born sons, 1963, Havana


In the 40 years since the sisters’ separation, Margarita and John opened a small dance academy in Narberth, Pennsylvania, near Philadelphia, where they remain committed to helping young dancers pursue their dream. Ramona became director of the Cuban National Schools of Ballet. It was not until 2000, after being approached by the filmmakers, that Margarita began to think seriously about returning to Cuba.
In the film, Margarita reflects, “When I left Cuba I didn’t just lose my biological family, I lost something very special to me—the National Ballet of Cuba. I lost two families.” Despite pouring her heart into her work and trying to create a new ballet family in the United States, she remains haunted by memories and loss.
In Cuba, the film follows Ramona in her routine as the sole woman who determines the fate of every aspiring dancer in the country, and viewers experience the all-encompassing, government-endowed National School of Ballet.
Finally, on February 28, 2004, Margarita, her husband, John, and her daughter, Melinda, depart for Havana. In a touching scene at José Martí Airport, Margarita, Ramona and their brother, Jovito, are finally reunited.
Still, the short visit between the twins remains guarded. On Margarita’s last day in Havana, a visit to their parents’ grave helps the twins put the loss of the past 40 years into some perspective. The desire to recover their past relationship exists, but as Margarita reflects, it will be work. “The ice has been broken to continue this relationship. But we have to work at it, in person.”
But once again, politics intervene in the twins’ relationship. In June 2004, the U.S. government tightened travel restrictions to Cuba. Now Margarita must wait until 2007 to see her sister again. Like the ongoing political situation between the United States and Cuba, the twins’ story still awaits an outcome.
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Filming of MIRROR DANCE was completed in 2004. The filmmakers report that as of October 2005, both Margarita and Ramona were still deeply immersed in ballet. Margarita continues to run the Pennsylvania Academy of Ballet with her daughter Melinda Pendleton and her husband John White, and Ramona continues her demanding job as the director of the Escuela Nacional de Ballet in Cuba. They keep in touch, primarily through email, and are anxiously awaiting a time when they can see each other again.
 
To all those Cubavision movie fans.

I know this is not the topic, but there is quite some talk about this channels so I thought I'd ask here.

I can´t seem to access their weekly programming anymore. They made some changes to their webpage. Is somebody accessing it and how?

Thanks.
 
the usual link does not work for me today , takes too long even for the main page at www.tvcubana.icrt.cu

try the national sunday only newspaper (maybe nowadays it has more editions during the week) that used to have the full schedule back when i was in cuba at Cartelera de la Televisión Cubana - Juventud Rebelde - Diario de la juventud cubana

as you can see next Saturday (sabado) night new release movie is the 2009 , Wrong Turn at Tahoe (inexplicably translated A un paso de la muerte or One step away from death) with Harvey keitel , Cuba Gooding Jr and Miguell Ferrer. It is about gangsters and drug dealers and its internal wars. Should be a good one , too bad it is not in HD and I am never home and I do not have a HDD to record it lol. Imagine .... , leaving Cuba to end up watching US movies on Cubavision on saturday nights , give me a break !, lol.
 
Thanks hdfan. I didn´t know about that Juventud Rebelde link.

I get home from work around midnight so I usually get to watch at least part of a movie. Beats my OTA options here.

Que bueno que ahora sea TU decision ver lo que quieras. :)
 
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