"You have to make a movie about it," a delighted Castro told Chavez in a lengthy telephone conversation shortly after the Venezuelan president was welcomed back to presidential palace in Caracas by cheering masses.
"What impressive images, the faces of the people, the happiness -- something never seen before, Chavez! It's something to make paintings about," he said.
Cuba published a transcript of the conversation in an eight-page pamphlet, offering a rare and dramatic glimpse of the two friends at a key moment in their history as the closest of allies.
"Yes, I've already ordered that that be investigated," Chavez responded, promising "I'll do everything possible to not give you another scare or reason to be sad."
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Chavez, who died of cancer March 5, 2013, was knocked from power on April 11, 2002 in a military coup set in motion by gunfire during a massive opposition march on the Miraflores palace that left 20 people dead.
Chavez was seized and flown under military escort to La Orchila, a presidential retreat on an island off Venezuela's northern Caribbean coast.
"What a day, Fidel!" Chavez said. "I'm just ... It's something incredible, incredible! I'm still processing things.