In the final shots, solved in a conditional way, we see this guy and other peasants dressed in the uniform of the herillos, with weapons in their hands, running down the slope, firing on the move. And on the huge balustrade of the palace, under the Slogan "Time is money", written in English, the then Cuban society gathered, as if its vertical slice — the ruling circles at the top, the panel girls at the bottom. And all this high- and low-placed rabble is vitiating, flirting, trading, dancing to thundering jazz, enjoying.
But machine-gun bursts are banging loudly, gilded generals, American businessmen, ladies in diamonds and girls of easy virtue are falling on the marble steps... The machine gun does not spare Nilogo — one by one, all the heroes of the picture grab at the throat: the governor and his henchmen, an ascetic-looking padre and a liberal journalist, and the heroine herself, a recent favorite of Antonin's people, stands right there at the column with a bowl of water, as an integral part of this world. And she, too, is being overtaken by guerrilla bullets. The authors put the last point — even somewhat unexpected — in relation to their heroine in the final.
She, this main character, is played by Idalia Anreus, who was crowned with the prize of the Moscow Film Festival for this role. This is one of those cases when you completely stop separating an actress from an image and, after seeing her in other films, for a moment you wonder: how did she get here?
Antonika is an elderly, dark, but kind woman who sincerely believed that the Mother of God chose her as her mediator to communicate with the suffering world. With the help of a bucket of ordinary water and anti-Satanic spells, she undertakes to cure any diseases, both physical and partly even social.
She discovered her "selectness" by accident when her child fell ill. And at first she was not going to go beyond her native village and hardly expected what an unexpected scale her activities could acquire. Thousands of people flock from afar to the modest hut and patiently stand for long hours and days under the tropical sun to get to the "reception" to Antonika. The ragged, beggars, covered with ulcers are walking, climbing, crawling from all sides, the dying are being dragged on stretchers, sick children are being carried in the arms of exhausted mothers: all of them, crowds of peasants, sick and beggars are going to Antonika's house, clinging to the last, almost impossible hope... Antonika was not afraid of this invasion, was not confused at the sight of the terrible crowds. On the contrary, she considered it a predestination from above. And she selflessly and selflessly undertook to heal. And I convinced them—and myself—that the impossible could come true.
And the crowds that have flooded the neighborhood of her house, as is often the case with large crowds of people, begin to live their own lives. In these spontaneously arisen "settlements" there are their own orders, their own laws, their own customs. Passions of far from divine content begin to boil around Antonika. While these are still local passions. A policeman for a bribe passes to the "saint" without a queue; a broken guy, a kind of Cuban Ostap Bender, promptly unfolds an uncomplicated, but lucrative merchant. The land landing of the merry girls hastily disembarks in the nearest fishing line. After all, a client who believes in holy water is no worse than anyone else.
Antonina does not suspect anything and enthusiastically continues to sprinkle an endless queue from a bucket. In this electrified atmosphere, she really manages to cure several nervous patients; a fact that could well be explained by modern psychotherapy. Naive Antonika easily believes in unscrupulous practical jokes organized by the same huckster, who needs spectacular spectacles to attract even wider masses of potential buyers. And now, one by one, the blind see and the crippled stand on their feet; looking at these satirical scenes, more than once you remember a similar healing in the "Feast of St. Jorgen". uchigatana
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Customers may pick up items Monday – Friday from 8:00AM until 3:30PM
Minimum 24-hour notice for customer pick-up.
$10/piece dock charge for pick-up by another carrier or customer pick-up.
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If you need specialized installation services for your project, look no further than TriMarc Installation. We have the experience to get the job done right, on time and on budget.
If purchasing through ADG Interiors, a brand of Atlanta Design Group:
Regular | Overtime (after 8 hours) | |
---|---|---|
One man and a truck: | $80/hour | $110/hour |
Two men and a truck: | $120/hour | $160/hour |
Three men and a truck: | $155/hour | $210/hour |
Four men and a truck: | $190/hour | $255/hour |
Four men and TWO trucks: | $220/hour | $285/hour |
Five men and TWO trucks: | $260/hour | $335/hour |
Six men and TWO trucks: | $295/hour | $380/hour |
Additional men: | +$40/hour | +$50/hour |
Additional truck: | +$30/hour | +$30/hour |
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Crypton Fabric Protection Service:
Chairs: | $20 – $59 |
Sofas: | $79 – $89 |
Sectionals: | $169 – $207 |
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