Budget
$9,600,000 (estimated)
Gross US & Canada
$2,484,186
Opening weekend US & Canada
$180,000
Gross worldwide
$4,408,011
Budget
$9,600,000 (estimated)
Gross US & Canada
$2,484,186
Opening weekend US & Canada
$180,000
Gross worldwide
$4,408,011
Movie reviews
( 12 )
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By Eliezer 2022-12-23 12:23:02
Cuban Revolutionary Years: The Homesickness of Half a Century
This is a movie destined to be overexpressed. When I saw the director telling how he used 16 years of hard work to make such a film in the extravaganza, when I learned that his family was forced to leave Cuba because the Castro regime came to power, I knew This movie will not be easy. From 1958 to 1959, Batista fell in the new year and Castro brought socialism. In the eyes of the big bourgeoisie, the revolution still seemed absurd. Carpenter deconstructed the French Revolution. I don't know...
By Ephraim 2022-11-27 11:11:48
"The Lost City", the Cuban revolution represented by a period of cultural change, in the eyes of a bar owner, apart from the disintegration of the family, may be the traditional and elegant culture represented by the saxophone in the flames of the revolution. The younger brother finally exchanged his life and blood for the disintegration of the family. The family dinner that started on time at 6 o'clock on the weekend only left the two elderly people who were dying. It might be unfair to say...
By Jerry 2022-11-27 08:21:29
This is a sad movie that discusses a very serious issue. Of course, it explains American democracy, just like the protagonist finally found the home of his free soul in the United States. Everyone has different answers to what freedom and democracy are. Everyone has something that his soul pursues. I never thought about these metaphysical things again. After watching the film, I wondered how I would make my own choices if I was in that era. There is no answer, because that is if, maybe it will...
By Emmalee 2022-11-23 18:56:03
"The Lost City" was unsatisfactory before and after the regime change
"Lost City",
which was unsatisfactory before and after the regime change, was an American film, but it was about the Cuban Revolution in 1958.
For me, in 1958 and the following years, what impressed me most was that the songs and people who supported Cuba in the country were organized to march. I can remember a few words from those songs:
"You want Cuba, not Yankees.
Gubasi,
Yankino." The
last two words are still young and I don't know what they mean.
"Lost...
By Marjolaine 2022-11-13 17:06:49
Before talking about the beauty of "THE LOST CITY", it seems that we must first talk about its political significance-whether it is the dictator Battista or the red Castro, this unique and beautiful land is cast over. Dust-this seems to be what this movie is about.
Actually, I don’t care about its political stance. The same incident has different meanings in the eyes of different people. Even if the movie clearly supports the non-violent reforms of the old professor and opposes the tyrant,...
User comments
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By Burley 2023-09-24 07:44:48
Should not be...
By Adolfo 2023-09-06 12:23:11
Some ideals are too heavy and the price is too high, we cannot afford...
By Wayne 2023-07-26 04:16:11
...it's really boring. Five stars are all human...
By Janelle 2023-07-08 10:01:43
What is lost in the revolution is not the city, but human...
By Lavonne 2023-07-01 08:41:36
In that era without the Internet, I actually bought a disc. . . The impression is not very deep, but I can feel that Garcia is thinking, not only his own personal destiny, but also the...
Fico Fellove: Why are you so unhappy?
Aurora Fellove: I'm not unhappy, I'm just sad.
Fico Fellove: Don't be.
Aurora Fellove: It's in my nature.
Fico Fellove: Hey, beauty's your nature.
Aurora Fellove: Sad can be beautiful.
Fico Fellove: Sad yes, but not sadness.
Fico Fellove: What illegal gambling?
Bola de Nieve: We caught two stage hands playing cards.
Fico Fellove: And that's illegal?
Miliciana Muñoz: Oh, it's worse than that. It is a dangerous distraction to the masses.
Bola de Nieve: "The opium of the people." Marx said it.
The Writer: I thought Marx said religion was the opiate of the people.
Miliciana Muñoz: Marx said that too.
The Writer: Carl or Groucho?
Don Federico Fellove: [on his deathbed] No one comes to say hello these days. Just goodbye.