- The first two episodes of the Netflix adaptation will be screened at the Havana Film Festival
- Netflix ranks crime dramas set in Latin America, such as "Narcos" among its most popular series
Outside the Yara cinema in Cuba's capital, workers on Friday prepared for the screening of the first TV adaptation of one of Latin America's most beloved novels, a mammoth challenge taken on by streaming giant Netflix and filmed entirely in Colombia.
The first two chapters of "One Hundred Years of Solitude" - a 16-episode series split into two parts—will be presented at the Havana film festival in the Caribbean island nation, where residents are blocked from accessing Netflix NFLX.O, among other U.S. websites.
The show adapts Nobel Prize winner Gabriel Garcia Marquez's 1967 classic, which chronicles seven generations of the Buendia family—many of whose members share the same names—in the fictional town of Macondo.
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It is considered one of the most important works of magical realism—a style pioneered in Latin America that blends realism with the fantastic—and a key product of the experimental and political literary movement known as the Latin American Boom.
Director Alex Garcia Lopez, who co-helmed Part 1 alongside Laura Mora, told Reuters that when he read the novel in his 20s, he was blown away by its ability to simultaneously tell the story of a country, a continent, and the human race.
For him, the story's heart is whether human beings can "beat our destiny, or if we are programmed to keep making the same mistakes generation after generation."
"This is very human," he said, pointing to the book's parallels to growing political polarization in the United States and Europe. "The book captured that in 1967 and remains essential today."
Promotional videos show exquisite 19th-century costumes and lush tropical scenery from Colombia's Caribbean coast.
Garcia Marquez, who died in 2014, had been reluctant to sell the rights for a Hollywood-esque adaptation of his novel.
Netflix's Latin American content vice president, Francisco Ramos, told Reuters, however, that the agreement with Garcia Marquez's sons had been "very straightforward. " Netflix committed early on to producing the show entirely in Colombia, in Spanish, and to using the series format to translate the novel's immense hundred-year scope.
The series credits the authors' two sons as executive producers.
"Adapting a masterpiece is a huge challenge," Ramos said. "We never had any doubt the enormous talent from Latin America - in this case mostly from Colombia - would be up to the task. They just needed the support and opportunity."
Ramos said Netflix, which recently released a film adaptation of Juan Rulfo's 1955 Mexican classic "Pedro Paramo," is now working on adaptations of works by Mexican writers Jorge Ibarguengoitia and Angeles Mastretta and Colombia's Laura Restrepo.
Netflix ranks crime dramas set in Latin America, such as "Narcos" and "Griselda," among its most popular series.
"We almost always export these stories of drug traffickers, illegal immigrants, prostitution, poverty, and dictatorships," Garcia Lopez noted.
"We want to show the world that we are more than what they know us for."
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