Fidel Castro, l'enfance d'un chef
Daniel Leconte
2004 - 55 min - Couleur - France

It's been almost 50 years now that Fidel Castro has held Cuba in his grip. Apart from his legend as the great liberator of Third World peoples and more recently his "last of the Mohicans" image of a dying communist system, what do we really know about him? We know all the ready-made answers: Cuba, colonial enclave plundered by Batista, a corrupt pro-American dictator. His way was laid out: the meeting with the Che, the adulation of the poor, the triumphant entry into Havana and the stirring utopian dream.
With the Berlin Wall down and the fog lifted, what we see now is a country destroyed by the arbitrary reign of a "lider maximo" over a anemic nation. And what if this Castro of legend was false? His story began in southern Cuba in 1926, when Fidel was born, an illegitimate child. Castro's childhood is not well known, often veiled, if not travestied. And yet, it sheds a light on the Cuban dictator's itinerary, his ideological and political course. Jesuit schooling, law studies at Havana University, student activism, meeting with the Che. Thus, contrary to what he has declared, politics and the downside of politics held no mystery for him, and this from a very early age. Drawing on rare archives and excusive interviews with those close to Fidel, this film reexamines his life.



Author-Director : Daniel Leconte
Photography : Peter Bolton, Ibar Aibar
Editing : Laurent Abellard
Delegate Producer : Doc en stock
Broadcasting Co-producer : ARTE France
Contribution : TSR (Télévision suisse romande), RTBF Bruxelles

Distribution


Distributor : Doc en stock

Distinctions

2005 - FIPA (Festival International de Programmes Audiovisuels), Biarritz (France) : Grands reportages et faits de société