Chico & Rita

Overview

A love affair between two musicians spans six decades and numerous countries and political regimes in this animated romantic drama. In 1948, Chico voice of Eman Xor Ona is a hotshot jazz pianist living in Havana, where his reputation as a ladies' man nearly outshines his talent at the keyboard. One night, Chico sees Rita voice of Limara Meneses singing "Love for Sale" at a nightclub, and it's love at first sight, though Rita is put off by the fact Chico already has a steady girl. However, when Chico backs Rita ...
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Blu-ray (Special Edition / Bonus DVD / Bonus CD)
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Overview

A love affair between two musicians spans six decades and numerous countries and political regimes in this animated romantic drama. In 1948, Chico voice of Eman Xor Ona is a hotshot jazz pianist living in Havana, where his reputation as a ladies' man nearly outshines his talent at the keyboard. One night, Chico sees Rita voice of Limara Meneses singing "Love for Sale" at a nightclub, and it's love at first sight, though Rita is put off by the fact Chico already has a steady girl. However, when Chico backs Rita during a talent competition held at a Havana radio station, she realizes they're musically simpatico, and her heart soon follows her creative instincts. But after a quarrel with Chico, Rita is approach by Ron, an American talent scout who says he can make her a star, and she takes him up on the offer, traveling with him to New York. Not wanting to lose Rita, Chico and his best friend Ramon head to New York City, but as Rita achieves fame and fortune in the United States, Chico finds the limelight is keeping them apart, and after returning to Cuba, the island's unstable political climate proves even better than Ron at keeping him away from Rita. Chico y Rita aka Chico and Rita was a collaboration between filmmaker and music producer Fernando Trueba, artist and designer Javier Mariscal, and animator and director Tono Errando, and features cartoon "cameo appearances" from a number of legendary jazz artists, including Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Chano Pozo.
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Special Features

Full-length Latin Grammy -winning Soundtrack; Excerpt from Bestselling Graphic Novel; Making of Chico & Rita Featurette; Audio Commentary with Directors Fernando Trueba and Javier Mariscal ; U.S.Trailer
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Editorial Reviews

All Movie Guide - Nathan Southern
The animated musical drama Chico & Rita tells the story of two Cuban lovers over the course of 60 years. When we first see the titular pair, it's 1948 -- he's a jazz pianist and accompanist, and she is a sultry vocalist specializing in Cuban ballads. Both reside in Havana, but Rita harbors dreams of relocating to America and establishing herself as a musical icon. As the story rolls forward, various external forces repeatedly attempt to tear the paramours apart, but their devotion to one another abides. The specific twists of the narrative matter little, for co-directors Fernando Trueba, Tono Errando, and Javier Mariscal have lifted the outlines from countless 1940s Hollywood romantic melodramas, to such a degree that many developments can be foreseen long before they transpire. Stylistically, Chico & Rita finds a unique and perfect visual idiom for Cuba, much as The Triplets of Belleville did for France and Persepolis did for Iran. The film looks as though traditional Havana poster art, with its bold outlines and flat shadings, has sprung to animated life. The results are revelatory not simply for their originality in a cinematic context, but for the sophisticated and complex thematic role that the style plays in a larger equation set up by Trueba and company. Namely, the familiar story beats and the evocations of indigenous murals go hand in hand to establish a transcendent onscreen depiction of myth that stands out in radiant contrast to a more realistic backdrop. Therefore, it isn't accidental that the visually flat characters exist amid stunningly ornate landscapes, as minutely detailed as anything in contemporary animation. Similarly, it was a calculated choice to posit the almost iconic story against a vivid historical background, populated by animated re-creations of real-life jazz figures such as Tito Puente, Woody Herman, and Ben Webster. In fact, the fictitious narrative runs parallel to a chronological history of jazz, so that as we follow Chico and Rita's paths repeatedly intersecting and diverging, we also get a glimpse of various jazz styles evolving and emerging with the shifting time frame. The ever-present jazz strains on the soundtrack also mesh perfectly with the torchy quality of the central romance. The picture reaches a narrative plateau with the development that drives home its central theme most effectively: a substory in which Chico and a male friend travel to New York City, encounter the hell-raising musician Chano Pozzo, and experience life on the wild side -- a rough joyride with Pozzo through the wintry streets of Manhattan. Appropriately, this sequence ends on December 2, 1948, as Chico and his buddy witness Pozzo's brutal murder at a Harlem speakeasy following a drug deal gone bad. The intersection of the factual and the fictitious here is vital: Recalling E.L. Doctorow's Ragtime, Trueba, Errando and Mariscal succeed at using this sequence to investigate how history and myth intersect, as well as build a running commentary on how one fosters the other. In addition to Chico & Rita's many aforementioned strengths, it feels refreshing to see an animated picture so squarely targeted to an older demographic. The film's marvelous thematic profundities would go far over the heads of youngsters, but other elements also make it singularly inappropriate for small fries -- such as occasional bursts of shocking violence and an erotic softcore lovemaking scene between Chico and Rita that leaves little to the imagination. This isn't entirely original, of course -- in recent years, we've seen a handful of American and European-produced movies which defy assumptions that the animated form is most suitable for children. But seldom have any of them pushed the edge of the envelope so satisfyingly far.
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Product Details

  • Release Date: 9/18/2012
  • UPC: 767685278796
  • Original Release: 2010
  • Source: New Video Group
  • Region Code: 0
  • Presentation: Special Edition / Bonus DVD / Bonus CD
  • Time: 1:34:00
  • Format: Blu-ray
  • Sales rank: 9,269

Cast & Crew

Performance Credits
Limara Meneses Voice Only
Eman Xor Oña Voice Only
Mario Guerra Voice Only
Bebo Valdés Voice Only
Idania Valdés Voice Only
Estrella Morente Voice Only
Freddy Cole Voice Only
Jimmy Heath Ben Webster (Instrumentals)
Pedrito Martínez Voice Only
Michael Phillip Mossman Dizzie Gillespie (Instrumentals)
Amadito Valdés Voice Only
German Velazco Charlie Parker (Instrumentals)
Yaroldi Abreu Voice Only
Rolando Luna Voice Only
Technical Credits
Tono Errando Director, Editor
Javier Mariscal Director
Fernando Trueba Director, Screenwriter
Steve Christian Executive Producer
Ignacio Martinez de Pison Screenwriter
Santi Errando Producer
Andrew Fingret Co-producer
Pelayo Gutierrez Sound Editor
Cristina Huete Producer
Pedrin E. Mariscal Art Director
Martin Pope Producer
Amau Quiles Editor
Antonio Resines Associate Producer
Michael Rose Producer
Nacho Royo-Villanova Sound Mixer
Marc Samuelson Executive Producer
Bebo Valdés Score Composer
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Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Chico & Rita [Special Edition]
1. Yesterday's Melodies [3:49]
2. Miss Leave-Me-Alone [5:47]
3. Tropicana [6:27]
4. The First Night [7:03]
5. Contest [5:45]
6. "A Little Taste Of Me" [10:19]
7. New York [10:21]
8. Party [10:15]
9. Paris [8:56]
10. Raid [10:15]
11. "Lily" [10:02]
12. End Credits [4:16]
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Menu

Disc #1 -- Chico & Rita [Special Edition]
   Play Film
   Scenes
   Extras
      Making of Chico & Rita
      Theatrical Trailer
   Setup
      Director's Commentary: On/Off
         Director's Commentary: On
         Director's Commentary: Off
      Audio
         5.1 Surround Sound
         2.0 Stereo
      English Subtitles: On/Off
         English Subtitles: On
         English Subtitles: Off
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