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Director : Rosie Perez, Liz Garbus
Producer : Rory Kennedy, Liz Garbus
Screenwriter : Rosie Perez
Starring :
Puerto Rico is a special case in American history, neither fish nor fowl, and
so off the radar of the average citizen as to almost not exist. Taken as a
prize in the 1898 Spanish-American War, the island was swiftly made into a
colony of sorts, the land pressed into service for sugar companies, while a
large segment of the population – who to this day don’t have the right to vote
for president – was put into uniform or brought to the U.S. mainland in a
little-known or -understood farm worker relocation program in the postwar
period. In 1952, the island was made into a commonwealth, a status it still
holds today, which makes it something less than a state and yet more than a
colony; though plenty of Puerto Ricans would argue that it much more strongly
resembles the latter.
The first major Latin American group to emigrate to the American mainland,
Puerto Ricans in the States number about three million today, though ignorance
of where they’re from and what they’re about is endemic. To illustrate this
ignorance in her documentary Yo Soy Boricua, Pa’que tu lo Sepas!, Rosie Perez
tells a story about being asked while she was in college where Puerto Rico was.
Thus the reason for her film – which she co-directed with Oscar-winner Liz
Garbus – which mixes Perez family history with that of the island and its
people in general. It’s sort of an elaborate home movie mixed with social
studies, but an impressive effort, nonetheless.
Perez was raised in Brooklyn and so not surprisingly brackets the film with
footage of the Puerto Rican Day Parade, the extravaganza that transforms the
city for one day into a red-white-and-blue street party; the last of the great
immigrant community celebrations. She structures the film as an exploration
into her roots, traveling with her sister and cousin to the parade, visiting
relatives back on the island and in Miami to meet some far-flung relatives
(“that’s very Puerto Rican,” she says, “You’re meeting cousins you never knew
all through your life”). Along the way, she drops in history lessons, starting
with Puerto Rico’s original Taino inhabitants (who called the island “Boricua”)
leading up through the American neo-colonization, the Black Panther-like Young
Lords agitators of the 1960s, and to the current debate over whether or not the
island should push for full statehood.
Perez is not the subtlest of documentarians, her script – narrated at times by
Jimmy Smits – makes its points about the oppression of Puerto Ricans (both on
the island and in the U.S.) with little art. There are times, especially in one
segment listing famous Puerto Ricans, where it threatens to devolve into a
feature-length shout-out. Of course, when one is talking about a people who
number in the millions in the U.S. and yet are essentially invisible in the
wider culture but for their parade (which likely accounts for its surprisingly
resilient vehemence) and were subjected to injustices like the little-known
program of sterilization to control the island’s population (this continued
into the 1970s), a lack of subtlety is perhaps understandable.
The biggest weapon in Perez’s arsenal is not the snippets of historical fact
but instead herself and her family, an engaging batch of relatives who follow
Rosie from place to place, providing entertaining commentary along the way.
They help enliven the cruder elements of the film, which occasionally
frustrates by only hinting at subjects that could have been gone into with more
depth. Although Yo Soy Boricua is likely destined more for the classroom and
cable TV (it has backing from IFC TV) than the theatrical circuit, and could
have used a bit of polish, it deserves a viewing not just for its lively
storytelling but for its attempt to make visible the previously hidden, to
bring a people out of the margins into which they have been forced.
Aka I’m Boricua, Just So You Know. Reviewed at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival.
Yo soy a bongo player.
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Rating: NR, 2006