The story of five Cuban political prisoners who had been imprisoned by the United States since the late 1990s on charges of espionage and murder.The story of five Cuban political prisoners who had been imprisoned by the United States since the late 1990s on charges of espionage and murder.The story of five Cuban political prisoners who had been imprisoned by the United States since the late 1990s on charges of espionage and murder.
- Awards
- 1 win & 3 nominations
Nolan Guerra
- Cruz León
- (as Nolan Guerra Fernandez)
Osdeymi Pastrana
- Irma Gonzalez
- (as Osdeymi Pastrana Miranda)
Leandro Cáceres
- Ponzón
- (as Leandro Caceres)
Ernesto Faxas
- Rene's FBI Contact
- (as Ernesto Ruiz Faxas)
Roque Moreno
- Colonel Ribeiro
- (as Juan Carlos Roque Moreno)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaPedro Pascal was originally cast but dropped out for undisclosed reasons and was replaced by Leonardo Sbaraglia.
- GoofsDuring his first flight with the PUND, Rene Gonzalez leaves Honduras in a different airplane than he lands in the U.S.; the registration number and the markings on the vertical fin are different.
- ConnectionsFeatured in CTV News at 11:30 Toronto: Episode dated 9 September 2019 (2019)
- SoundtracksInstrumental Lament I
Performed by Haig Sarikouyoumdjian and Nedyalko Nedyalkov
Featured review
Because much of my joy in reliving history is through cinema, I eagerly went to Netflix to experience writer/director Olivier Assayas's Wasp Network (with writer Fernando Morais as well). Having never thought about the spies in the 90's who infiltrated the anti-Castro movement in Florida, I now have a vivid picture of them and their heroic, self-sacrificing for communist Cuba.
This sometimes-incoherent docudrama (just too many spies dancing in the espionage world with nary a pause to figure if they're working for the rebels, the Cuban government, or the FBI). Olga Salaneuva (Penelope Cruz), wife of ace pilot for the Cuban government, Rene Gonzalez (Edgar Ramirez), who secretly infiltrates the rebels without her knowing, provides a dramatic glue as she interacts also with other recruits for the government through her husband.
Gerardo Hernandez (Gael Garcia Bernal) is responsible for supervising the spies in Florida into the Wasp Network. Already you can see my challenge making coherent an unwieldy assembly of heroes and scalawags-I have yet to adequately assess the worth of the film.
I'm going to do that now while I have much else of the plot left undone: The excellent cast and the stellar DP's (Yorick Le Saux and Denis Lenoir) have reminded us what a romantic and troubled island Cuba has been since Fidel Castro began his long rule. With cooperation from Cuba, the colorful decadence and charming decay of that festive nation are on display. Old American cars and shabby multicolored buildings create the perfect metaphor for the revolution with its romantic aspirations and real-time rationing of food and gas, enough to make emigration to the US a realistic goal.
Assayas has too much to cover, but what he does, when you factor out the excessive time given to domestic challenges and even a wedding, is fascinating to see how much these spies have given up for Cuba. The history is well known-The spies are caught and mostly turn on each other to accept the FBI's plea deals.
Communists still rule Cuba, and it suffers from the sanctions the Us has firmly held since Castro. In spite of that relatively poor profile, people are willing to sacrifice for Cuban ideals by joining the Wasp Network-and it stings. The movie, however, is historically and visually balm for the history-loving cinephile.
This sometimes-incoherent docudrama (just too many spies dancing in the espionage world with nary a pause to figure if they're working for the rebels, the Cuban government, or the FBI). Olga Salaneuva (Penelope Cruz), wife of ace pilot for the Cuban government, Rene Gonzalez (Edgar Ramirez), who secretly infiltrates the rebels without her knowing, provides a dramatic glue as she interacts also with other recruits for the government through her husband.
Gerardo Hernandez (Gael Garcia Bernal) is responsible for supervising the spies in Florida into the Wasp Network. Already you can see my challenge making coherent an unwieldy assembly of heroes and scalawags-I have yet to adequately assess the worth of the film.
I'm going to do that now while I have much else of the plot left undone: The excellent cast and the stellar DP's (Yorick Le Saux and Denis Lenoir) have reminded us what a romantic and troubled island Cuba has been since Fidel Castro began his long rule. With cooperation from Cuba, the colorful decadence and charming decay of that festive nation are on display. Old American cars and shabby multicolored buildings create the perfect metaphor for the revolution with its romantic aspirations and real-time rationing of food and gas, enough to make emigration to the US a realistic goal.
Assayas has too much to cover, but what he does, when you factor out the excessive time given to domestic challenges and even a wedding, is fascinating to see how much these spies have given up for Cuba. The history is well known-The spies are caught and mostly turn on each other to accept the FBI's plea deals.
Communists still rule Cuba, and it suffers from the sanctions the Us has firmly held since Castro. In spite of that relatively poor profile, people are willing to sacrifice for Cuban ideals by joining the Wasp Network-and it stings. The movie, however, is historically and visually balm for the history-loving cinephile.
- JohnDeSando
- Jun 23, 2020
- Permalink
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- شبكة الدبابير
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $1,569,970
- Runtime2 hours 7 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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