|
Motorcycle
Diaries, The
(2004)
Starring:
Gael Garcia Bernal, Rodrigo De la Serna
Director:
Walter Salles
Rating:
R
Distributor:
Focus Features
Release Date:
09.24.04
Review
Posted: 10.06.04
By
George Schmidt
Revelatory
Revoluctionary
Che Guevera is
sadly best known today as a mysterious icon for a pop culture ironic
t-shirt sported by the supposedly hip and political. Few, including
this reviewer, really knew much more about the firebrand revolutionist
who was a comrade in Cuban arms with Fidel Castro in a crusade that
led to his eventual capture and execution by the CIA as a notorious
fly-in-the-ointment career criminal.
However new
insight - albeit a few shades of grey and free styling dramatic
license intact - depicts a twenty something medical student named
Ernesto Guevera da la Serna, a South American native (memorably
portrayed by the ever soulful Bernal, in a truly outstanding
breakthrough performance) who partners with his best friend Alberto
Granado (strongly supportive De la Serna) on a trek by motorcycle (a
battered 1939 Norton to be exact) an 800 plus mile quest from
Argentina up thru the upper regions of Peru with nothing but a few
provisions and even less dinero.
Relying on
their bonhomie, make-shift surroundings and clever improvisation the
odd couple manage to get to Ernesto's girlfriend's neuveau riche
family where he tells the lovely Chichina Ferreyra (the fetching
Maestro) that he wants her to wait for him but knows in his heart this
is more than likely never to be.
After several
humorous encounters along the fray the duo finally have to give up
their trusty vehicle after many hardships and torrential weather
obstacles force them to go on foot, and then finally take a ferry to
their destination: an internship with a leper colony. Along the way
the duo meet many disenfranchised and impoverished fellow countrymen
and their women and families and with each soul-crushing pit-stop you
can feel the stirrings of ire catching fire within the young man who
will become Che
Guevera.
Walter Salles,
who directed the exceptional Central Station, smartly allows
his two fine actors plenty of room to get into the skins of their
funny, fighting and deep souled characters while enlisting the
picturesque surroundings of the lush and jaw-droppingly beautiful
playas, mountains and countryside (exquisitely rendered by ace
cinematographer Eric Gautier) and underlies the proceedings with a
hauntingly stirring score by Gustavo Santaolalla.
But it is
Bernal who is most powerful in his implosive, soulful and heartfelt
turn as the young impassioned man just about to break for greatness;
the same can be said of this talented actor's star bursting career.
Film
Rating:
κκκ1/2 (out of
4)
Home | Back to Top |