

United States • English • 1999 • 1h 45m
Traveling from the streets of Havana to the stage of Carnegie Hall, this revelatory documentary captures a forgotten generation of Cuba’s brightest musical talents as they enjoy an unexpected encounter with world fame. The veteran vocalists and instrumentalists collaborated with American guitarist and roots-music champion Ry Cooder to form the Buena Vista Social Club, playing a jazz-inflected mix of cha-cha, mambo, bolero, and other traditional Latin American styles, and recording an album that won a Grammy and made them an international phenomenon. In the wake of this success, director Wim Wenders filmed the ensemble’s members—including golden-voiced Ibrahim Ferrer and piano virtuoso Rubén González—in a series of illuminating interviews and live performances. The result is one of the most beloved documentaries of the 1990s, and an infectious ode to a neglected corner of Cuba’s prerevolutionary heritage.

Wim Wenders on BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB

Radio Interviews: Eliades Ochoa

Radio Interviews: Manuel “Puntillita” Licea

Radio Interviews: Orlando “Chachaito” Lopez

Radio Interviews: Manuel “Guajiro” Mirabal

Radio Interviews: Juan de Marcos

Radio Interviews: Omara Portuondo

Radio Interviews: Ibrahim Ferrer

Radio Interviews: Barbarito Torres

Radio Interviews: Pío Leyva

Radio Interviews: Rubén González

Radio Interviews: Manuel Galbán

Radio Interviews: Alberto “Virgilio” Valdés

Las claves: Compay Segundo

BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB Additional Scenes: “Candela,” Amsterdam

BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB Additional Scenes: Alberto Korda’s Photographs

BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB Additional Scenes: Juan de Marcos González Interview

BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB Additional Scenes: “Cienfuegos Tiene Su Guaguanco”
via Criterion Collection
Position 22