New Showbiz

You are here:
Day of the Flowers

Day of the Flowers

2013

Director

John Roberts

Runtime

100 minutes

Average Rating

No ratings yet

Synopsis

Two young, strong-willed Scottish sisters, one a left-wing activist, the other a most-popular-girl-in-school type, take their late father's ashes to Cuba, the site of many family legends of his services to the Revolution. Arriving in Havana, the two women promptly lose the ashes and go through a series of misadventrues - both romantic and dangerous - to try to retrieve them. A colourful and wryly humourous tale of cross-cultural misunderstandings and lost illusions.

Where to Watch

Diversity & Representation

Overall Score

6.1/10

Good


Category Breakdown

LGBTQ+ Representation

Fair

The film lacks explicit depictions of non-cisnormative identities or same-sex intimacy. While romantic misadventures occur, the specific nature of these relationships remains unconfirmed.

Gender Representation

Good

The story centers on female agency, placing two sisters in primary roles. By contrasting an activist with a socialite, the film avoids monolithic female tropes.

Racial & Ethnic Diversity

Good

The narrative utilizes a Cuban setting to explore cross-cultural friction. It engages with the intersection of Scottish heritage and Cuban revolutionary history.

Religious & Cultural Diversity

Good

The film engages deeply with non-Western political frameworks. It explores the tension between Western travelers and the socialist context of the Cuban Revolution.

Disability Representation

Minimal

There is no evidence regarding the inclusion or portrayal of characters with visible or invisible disabilities.

Strengths

  • Strong female agency through two distinct, non-monolithic sister protagonists.
  • Engages with complex non-Western political and revolutionary histories.
  • Challenges Western-centric perspectives via cross-cultural misunderstandings.

Areas for Improvement

  • Lack of explicit LGBTQ+ representation or non-cisnormative character arcs.
  • No visible or invisible disability representation within the narrative.
  • Limited specific data regarding the racial makeup of the cast.

AI Analysis

Day of the Flowers is a character-driven exploration of identity and political legacy. It succeeds by centering female protagonists within a culturally complex, high-stakes environment. The film's strength lies in its engagement with non-Western political histories. It uses the deconstruction of familial myths to challenge Western-centric perspectives through cross-cultural friction. However, the film's specific identity-based data is limited. While the structural approach to global storytelling is progressive, the lack of explicit representation in certain categories limits its impact.

How are these scores produced? →

Similar Movies

Movie poster for Love in Taipei

Love in Taipei

2023

No user ratings available yet
Diversity score: 5.3 out of 10

Rate this Movie

No rating selected
Use arrow keys to select a rating from 1 to 5 stars
Optional text review, maximum 2000 characters
Tip: Wrap spoilers with ||double pipes|| to hide them
0/2000 characters
You must be signed in to submit a rating

Reviews

No reviews yet. Be the first to share your thoughts on this movie!

Use the rating form above to leave a star rating and optional review.