



Centered on the remarkable letters by José Lezama Lima to his sister living in exile in the United States, this feature length documentary "Letters to Eloísa" tells the story of the Cuban writer’s life and work; weaving together the public and the private, the literary and the political, ultimately to focus how the writer’s voice, at first amplified by the revolution’s cultural policies, was ultimately silenced by the absence of creative freedom in Cuba during its most tumultuous decades; beginning with the publication of his literary masterpiece "Paradiso", a novel with a strong homoerotic content that clashed with the government’s contemporaneous campaign of institutional homophobia. "Paradiso"'s controversy was soon followed by the famous Padilla Case which brought about a massive crack down on intellectual freedom in Cuba. Once hailed as Cuba’s most influential writer Lezama was censored, ostracized, forbidden to travel outside Cuba. His books were removed from libraries and bookstores. The film establishes the greatness of Lezama Lima’s literature and recounts the tragic end of the great Cuban writer, alone and silenced at his home in Trocadero Street, as well as his posthumous redemption by the very government that crushed him.