It’s no less true for being a cliché: art has the power to bring people together. And that power is at the center of the joyous “Give Me Future,” a film about electronic-dance wizards Major Lazer bringing their act to Havana, Cuba. What results is that rarest of creations: the feel-good documentary.
In following the EDM combo — Diplo, Walshy Fire and Jillionaire — to Cuba, director Austin Peters (“Haim Forever”) goes beyond the usual concert movie beats. Major Lazer’s 2016 live performance in downtown Havana is electrifying, to be sure, but “Give Me Future” is just as interested in the logistics involved in putting on a show there, as well as the culture and the people of the country itself.
For the three musicians behind Major Lazer, playing Cuba was a long-standing dream, one they had well before President Obama began reopening U.S. relations. With their roots in South Florida and the Caribbean, the group had already played everywhere else in the region. (This is the kind of combo whose world tours live up to the name; besides the usual stops, they hit places like Pakistan, Croatia and Ethiopia.)
Besides the expected bureaucratic hoops, the band also has to contend with the fact that Cuba has been isolated from much of the rest of the world, although it turns out you can still get your music heard in a country with a tightly-controlled state-run media. The film introduces us to “the paquete,” a hard drive created by one Cuban techno geek; every week, he fills a one-terabyte drive with the latest international movies, TV shows and music, and it’s copied and distributed throughout the country, in what’s probably the world’s most extensive non-online network.
The paquete’s motto is “no porn and no politics,” but as one interviewee notes, this is a case where the medium is literally the message, with American reality shows and Korean telenovelas and Euro-pop making its way to a hungry audience that is deprived of such pleasures via official means.
“Give Me Future” shows us a Cuba we wouldn’t necessarily expect — when Diplo asks the sea of fans at the Major Lazer show to hold up their cellphones as the sun sets, seemingly everybody has one — although some aspects of a totalitarian country don’t change: A political rapper with a large national following bows out of performing at the last minute, lest he spontaneously say something that gets the whole concert shut down. (Major Lazer provides stage time for several Cuban acts, and the film introduces us to some of these musicians as well.)
Cuba’s cultural isolation perhaps comes through most vividly when Major Lazer plays a can’t-miss 1990s party jam, and the audience fails to respond because it’s a song they’ve never heard, even though it was a huge hit everywhere else in the world. Still, the Cuban promoters and musicians represented in the film are never portrayed as closed-off or provincial; they’re all striving to create no matter what their circumstances, and their thrill in performing is evident.
“Give Me Future” culminates, of course, with Major Lazer’s Havana show, and it’s an exuberant event; the audience (of hundreds of thousands, stretching out over several blocks and occupying every balcony within sight of the stage) explodes with enthusiasm, and Peters and cinematographer Deering Regan’s camera make that delight infectious. Even if you’re not a big fan of EDM, it’s hard not to respond to the chord it strikes with everyone who comes out for the show.
The buoyancy and electricity of “Give Me Future” will no doubt win Major Lazer new converts, but the film also offers hope that political and social gaps can always be bridged. Especially when there’s a good beat, and you can dance to it.
Sundance Parties: 11 Celebrities Going to Park City Without a Film (Photos)
Starring in a buzzy indie film is no longer the price of admission at Sundance. From A-list producers (Matt Damon), to Youtube icons (Gigi Gorgeous and Tyler Oakley), and buzzy celebrity couples (Kate Upton and Justin Verlander), here's who you will see "off screen" around Park City. Keep your head on a swivel.
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Model Kate Upton and MLB Pitching Ace Justin Verlander
The model and her Detroit Tigers pitching star fiancé will be promoting a branded content series they made for Condé Nast and Golf Digest.
Saturday, Jan. 21 at Rock & Reilly’s
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Matt Damon
Last year Damon hit it big with the sale of “Manchester By the Sea” to Amazon. This year, he’s returning to Park City to talk up his Water.org charity and a new partnership with Stella Artois. The film-friendly brew partners up with Jason Bourne for the next four years to provide clean water to 3.5 million people.
Saturday afternoon (Jan. 21) at the Stella Artois Lounge on Main. On Monday Jan. 23, a doc he executive produced "Bending the Arc" premieres.
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But have I seen this before?
Yes, you have.
Damon's dedication is not a "one-off." He made the same case a year ago during the Flint, Michigan water crisis. Water.org co-founder Gary White is on the left.
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Youtubing Transgender Pioneer Gigi Gorgeous
The transgender icon is the exception on this list - she has a movie. The feature documentary “This is Everything: Gigi Gorgeous” has a world premiere at the Marc on Tuesday, January 24 at 5:30 p.m.
A two-time Oscar winner directed the YouTube Red Original, the video giant’s in-house studio which runs an expansive program of consumer and industry events during the festival. Word is Monday night's music showcase is one not to miss.
Jan 19-24 at the YouTube House on Main.
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John Legend
You can't escape the “La La Land” momentum.
Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling's co-star is not routing the Oscar frontrunner’s run to the Academy Awards through Park City.
Instead, the frequent Sundance attendee is promoting and hosting a party for the TV show he executive produces, WGN’s “Underground.”
Saturday night, Jan. 21 at Riverhorse on Main
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Sushi by Chef Nobu
The chef and partner in Robert De Niro's top shelf sushi outposts won't be there himself, but his plates will.
Executive Chef Gregorio Stephenson will be hosting comped meals for private parties (as in social groups, not just film parties) over the first weekend. Like everything else, reservations are taken by invitation only.
AT&T's Village at the Lift, Friday and Saturday nights (Jan. 20-21)
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Tiesto and Marshmello
Popular electronic music's "Adam" (Tiesto) and the breakout new kid of the last year (Marshmello, right) play Park City Live's ticketed "Snow Fest," a lineup that also includes Busta Rhymes, Zedd, and Doug E. Fresh. By day, PCL is "The Hub" hosting interviews with Marie Claire magazine and some high end technology from the Consumer Technology Association.
Friday Jan. 20: Marshmello
Saturday Jan. 21: Tiesto, presented by AwesomenessTV.
427 Main Street. Snow Fest tickets available to the general public. By day, "The Hub" is private.
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Diplo
The multi-hyphenate creative has so much going he needs to come to Park City on both weekends of the festival. Details below:
Rolling in after the premiere of her primetime Fox show "My Kitchen Rules" just last week, the Iron Chef is cooking up one installment of ChefDance that will be a benefit for Operation Smile.
Monday night, Jan. 23. at ChefDance in the Memorial Building (427 Main St.)
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"Chopped" Judge Marcus Samuelsson
The broadcast food critic and Harlem restauranteur (Red Rooster Harlem, Streetbird Rotisserie) whips up the menu for Damon’s Water.org event.
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Digital A-Lister and LGBT Icon Tyler Oakely
The social media A-lister isn’t going to the film festival on account of his 2015 documentary “Snervous.” Instead, it’s because in 2017 only an elitist indie cine-snob would marginalize Youtube videos and their creators in a lower arts tier from film/video shorts.
YouTube agrees. They are the festival’s official shorts partner (5 years running). Check out Tyler's panel, “YouTube and Using Your Platform for Change."
Saturday, Jan. 21 at the Cinetransformer Mobile Theater
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..and a hint of Taylor Swift coming to the next major celebrity industry gathering.
DirecTV throws the largest Super Bowl party every year with performers like Justin Timberlake, Katy Perry, Usher, and Jay-Z headlining past installments. This year, Taylor Swift is on tap for Houston.
Sans Swift, DirecTV is promoting the new DirecTV Now service and it's deep business with the NFL, by hosting an AFC/NFC Championship watch party at corporate parent’s AT&T Village at the Lift.
Sunday, Jan. 22. 1 p.m. – 7 p.m.
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For more on the party scene in Park City, click below to browse 5 of The Party Report's top invites for the festival.
Find out why Matt Damon and John Legend will be at the wintry festival, from The Party Report’s Mikey Glazer
Starring in a buzzy indie film is no longer the price of admission at Sundance. From A-list producers (Matt Damon), to Youtube icons (Gigi Gorgeous and Tyler Oakley), and buzzy celebrity couples (Kate Upton and Justin Verlander), here's who you will see "off screen" around Park City. Keep your head on a swivel.