In the Time of the Butterflies (film)
In the Time of the Butterflies | |
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Cinematography | Xavier Pérez Grobet |
Edited by | Pablo Blanco |
Music by | Van Dyke Parks |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date |
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Running time | 95 minutes |
Countries | United States Mexico |
Languages | English Spanish |
In the Time of the Butterflies is a 2001
In the film, Salma Hayek played one of the sisters, Minerva, and Edward James Olmos plays Trujillo. Marc Anthony has a minor role as Minerva's first love, and the impetus for her later revolutionary activities.[1]
Plot
The film begins with pictures and video of the actual victims of Trujillo. During the montage, a title card appears that says:
- From 1930 to 1961, General Rafael Leónidas Trujillo held absolute control of the Dominican Republic.
- His secret alliance with the church, aristocrats, intellectuals and the press were the foundation of his dictatorship.
- His formula to remain in power was simple: murder anyone who opposed him.
- More than 30,000 people were executed during his regime of terror...
The scene shifts to a prison cell, where one of his victims, Minerva Mirabal (Salma Hayek), recounts the events of the story.
Minerva and her three sisters, Patria (
When school is over, Minerva wishes to study to become a lawyer, but women are not allowed in law school. The sisters return to the farm, and Minerva soon meets and falls in love with Virgilio "Lio" (Marc Anthony), a member of the Dominican resistance, who gives her the nickname "Butterfly", or Mariposa in Spanish. Lio's activities during a college protest are noticed, and he is forced to leave the country out of fear for his life, though he continues to write to Minerva.
Minerva, along with her family, is invited to a formal ball at Trujillo's palace, where she dances with him. During their dance, Minerva asks for permission to attend law school, but Trujillo declines. He grabs Minerva inappropriately, and she responds by recoiling and slapping him in the face. Her family quickly rushes to her side, and Trujillo allows them to leave. The next day, the chief of police, Captain Peña (
Minerva's victory is hollow. Her father is released from prison, but has been tortured and soon dies. While attending his funeral, the police chief delivers to Minerva a letter permitting her to attend law school. Minerva's hatred of Trujillo is intense, but she decides to accept his "gift" because she views it as her only way to effectively oppose him.
While in law school, Minerva discovers that Lio has been killed by Trujillo supporters even though he was out of the country. She meets other members of the resistance, who, through Lio, know of her as "Butterfly". She becomes a member of the resistance, and over time Patria and Maté learn of her activities and become involved too. She falls in love with Manolo Tavárez (Demián Bichir), a fellow law student and member of the resistance, and they are married.
When Minerva graduates from law school, Trujillo is present to pass out the diplomas. All the other students receive diplomas, but he refuses to give Minerva hers, saying he agreed to allow her to attend law school, not to practice law.
After law school, Minerva has children but continues her resistance activities. After a series of increasingly dangerous events, she, Maté, and many resistance members are arrested and sent to jail. Minerva becomes a symbol, and many prisoners, guards, and outsiders secretly voice their support for "the Butterflies".
Eventually, Minerva and Maté are released from jail, but their husbands and Patria's are still held captive. The women continue their efforts to locate their husbands. Trujillo stops by to visit Minerva at her home, and she asks for his help to get their husbands released. Trujillo vows to help Minerva "end her troubles".
While returning from a trip to visit their husbands, Minerva, Patria, and Maté are stopped on the road by a large group of Trujillo's men. They are taken some distance off the main road, and the men surround them and beat them to death.
Another title card appears at the end that says:
- The Death of the Mirabal Sisters was the final blow to the regime of Leónidas Trujillo, who was assassinated six months later.
- Several of the children of the Mirabal sisters held important posts in the later democratic governments of the Dominican Republic.
- The day of the sisters' death, November 25th, is observed in many Latin Americancountries as the International Day Against Violence Towards Women.
Cast
- Minerva Mirabal
- Edward James Olmos as Rafael Trujillo
- Mía Maestro as Maté Mirabal
- Demián Bichir as Manolo Tavárez
- Pilar Padillaas Dedé Mirabal
- Lumi Cavazos as Patria Mirabal
- Marc Anthony as Lio
- Pedro Armendáriz, Jr.as Captain Peña
- Ana Martín as Mrs. Mercedes Mirabal, the mother
- Paulina Treviño as Sinita
- Ana Layevska as Lina Lovatón
- Fernando Becerril as Mr. Enrique Mirabal
- Roger Cudney as Dominican Ambassador Manuel de Moya
- Anthony Alvarez as Palomino
- Ermahn Ospina as Jaimito
- Raúl Méndez as Pedrito
- Mariana Sánchez as Minerva at 13 years old
See also
- Trópico de Sangre, a fact-based film about the Mirabal sisters released in 2010.
References
- ^ von Tunzelmann, Alex (18 March 2010). "In the Time of the Butterflies: feisty but it doesn't really fly". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 24 September 2020.
External links
- In the Time of the Butterflies at IMDb