Los Angeles Times

Espionage saga misses the mark

Talented cast aside, “Wasp Network” is too often a convoluted look at 1990s Cuba.

- By Carlos Aguilar

For the sun-drenched espionage saga “Wasp Network,” French auteur Olivier Assayas assembled the Avengers of Ibero American cinema, including Venezuelan actor Edgar Ramírez, whom he’d previously directed in the acclaimed miniseries “Carlos.” Regrettabl­y, his latest “based-on-atrue-story” movie amounts only to a choppy recap of recent Cuban history despite its high concentrat­ion of acting talent.

In the early 1990s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union and the economic crisis known as the Special Period (exacerbate­d by the decades-long U.S. embargo), hope for regime change in Cuba grew among emigrants in Miami.

Against that backdrop, Assayas introduces a group of archetypes with minimal character developmen­t beyond their role in a political masquerade among Cubans loyal to the government, exiles orchestrat­ing terrorist attacks targeting the country’s tourism infrastruc­ture to hurt Fidel Castro financiall­y and the U.S. agencies playing devil’s advocate. It’s closer to an anthology film than a searing ensemble piece.

Magnetic as usual, even if wasted here, Ramírez plays polyglot pilot René González, a link in a chain of Cuban defectors who join Brothers to the Rescue, a Florida-based organizati­on dedicated to saving balseros (rafters) lost at sea and participat­ing in illicit activities on behalf of the Cuban American National Foundation. Enigmatic Juan Pablo Roque (Brazil’s Wagner Moura) soon joins him to work under leader José Basulto (Argentine actor Leonardo Sbaraglia).

As we quickly become more entangled in their multiple webs of deceit involving the FBI, drug traffickin­g and militant recruitmen­t in Central America — and especially once everyone’s true allegiance is revealed — the more their unquestion­ed conviction to the cause resonates as a major oversight on Assayas’ part.

Narrative building blocks pile on without exploring what motivates these men, whether they truly believe in the ideals they claim to uphold or what they think of their fellow Cubans on the other side of the ideologica­l aisle. At the risk of them and their families being stigmatize­d as gusanos (traitors), they follow orders under the pretense of a greater objective.

Cubans who defended the revolution and those who fought from afar for democracy by any means necessary all believe themselves to be “Free Cubans” — free from imperialis­t forces or from Castro’s tyranny. Each band rationaliz­es its fervent patriotism. Such mental turmoil is inherently engrossing, yet Assayas, who wrote as well as directed, chose not to make it the movie’s compass.

Instead of providing perspectiv­e, Assayas’ outsider point of view works against him here. For a filmmaker capable of subtle portraits, such as “Personal Shopper” or “Clouds of Sils Maria,” he misses the mark going the didactic route with an emphasis on the timeline and globetrott­ing plot. A two-hour running time was also likely the incorrect format to convey such a multiangul­ar epic that’s so deeply rooted in historical facts.

Ana de Armas, the only Cuban national among the top-billed actors, grew up on the island precisely during this turbulent time, but her character, Roque’s wife, Ana Magarita, is limited to a pair of emotional outbursts in English that voice no opinion on these matters. This marks the second instance in which De Armas and Moura play romantic partners in inconsiste­nt Netflix projects; this year, they starred in the biopic “Sergio.”

Of the many leads, Spanish star Penélope Cruz gets the most nuanced material to work with playing Olga, González’s wife who stays in Havana caring for their daughter, unaware of his real mission. Cruz is the main reason to see “Wasp Network,” not only because her Cuban accent is the best by far but also because she portrays a great interperso­nal dilemma caught between family and homeland. Whenever she is onscreen, her fiery performanc­e brings a bit of the humanistic component the film so desperatel­y needs.

Halfway through the convoluted story, Mexico’s Gael García Bernal appears via a flashback that connects everyone we’ve met thus far and other new faces, à la ’70s cop shows, with a voice-over detailing the purpose and tactics of “La Red Avispa” (Wasp Network). This set piece represents one of the few noteworthy stylistic touches. Fade-to-black transition­s and archival footage, including an interview with Castro himself, help editor Simon Jacquet create respites from barrage of cumulative informatio­n.

“Wasp Network” doesn’t reckon with the American interest and support of the anti-revolution­ary factions, just as it fails to delve into the conflicted Cuban experience. It covers a lot of ground in a skin-deep manner that’s more useful as an intensive overview of the events — if you manage to keep track of who is working for which organizati­on at any given time and why.

There’s a version of this tale of two Cubas, the real and the imagined, waiting to be told with a similarly remarkable cast but with an emphasis on all those people who yearn for their island nation, wherever they may be.

 ?? Netf lix ?? EDGAR RAMÍREZ stars in this cinematic recap of the recent history of Cuba.
Netf lix EDGAR RAMÍREZ stars in this cinematic recap of the recent history of Cuba.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States