Los Angeles Times

Detailed look at Elián Gonzalez

- — Robert Abele

For seven frenzied months, between a dramatic inner-tube rescue off the coast of Florida in 1999 and an armed raid on a modest Miami house, 6-year-old Elián Gonzalez was more than just a boy who’d lost his mother: For many, his situation — Cuban refugee? American captive? Castro pawn? — was a chance for a cold war to get hot again.

“Elián,” a comprehens­ive documentar­y retelling of that fierce custody battle (with updates), lays out the ways the story’s warring guardians — biological and ideologica­l, legal and emotional — turned a child into a puppet and possibly changed the course of everything from news coverage to American politics and U.S.Cuba relations.

In securing interviews with so many key players — Elián; his father, Juan Miguel; Miami cousin Marisleysi­s whose tears galvanized the Cuban exile community, negotiator­s and politician­s — directors Tim Golden and Ross McDonnell, with the help of narrator Raul Esparza, do justice to all sides.

The result is that your sympathy and judgment coexist, no matter how winceinduc­ing it gets with each turbulent turn.

Eventually it’s Elián himself — an inscrutabl­y innocent-looking boy in news footage, a reflective young man for the filmmakers — who communicat­es the surest truth: Emerging from such a firestorm knowing who you are is its own reward.

“Elián.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 48 minutes. Playing: Arena Cinelounge Sunset, Hollywood.

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