Guerrilla (film)
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| Guerrilla | |
|---|---|
del Toro as Che |
|
| Directed by | Steven Soderbergh |
| Produced by | Laura Bickford Benicio del Toro Steven Soderbergh |
| Written by | Peter Buchman Steven Soderbergh Ben Van Der Veen |
| Starring | Benicio del Toro Demian Bichir Franka Potente Julia Ormond |
| Music by | Alberto Iglesias |
| Cinematography | Steven Soderbergh (as "Peter Andrews") |
| Editing by | Pablo Zumárraga |
| Distributed by | Focus Features |
| Release date(s) | May 21, 2008 (Cannes Film Festival) |
| Running time | 131 minutes |
| Country | Spain United States |
| Language | English Spanish |
| Allmovie profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
Guerrilla is a 2008 biopic about revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara, portrayed by Benicio del Toro. The film, which covers the latter period of Guevara's life, is directed by Steven Soderbergh from a script by Peter Buckman. It is the second half of a two part examination of Guevara's actively revolutionary life, the first part, The Argentine, relating the events of the Cuban Revolution.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
After the fall of Fulgencio Batista in Cuba, Guevara moved on to foment revolutions in Africa and South America, eventually being captured and killed by counter-insurgency rangers in the mountains of Bolivia, backed by the CIA.
[edit] Production
According to an October 2006 article in Variety magazine, Soderbergh plans to make two films about Che with the other called The Argentine. "The Argentine will focus on the Cuban revolution, from the moment Fidel Castro, Guevara and other revolutionaries landed on the Caribbean island, until they toppled the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista two years later. Guerrilla will focus on the years following the Cuban revolution. It will begin with Che's trip to speak at the UN headquarters in New York in 1964, until his death in the Bolivian mountains in 1967."[1]
Soderbergh shot both films back to back over a 90-day period beginning in May 2007 with most of the dialogue in Spanish. The original intention was that Guerrilla was shot, according to Soderbergh, "in Super-16, 1.85:1. No dollies, no cranes, it's all either handheld or tripods. I want it to look nice but simple. We'll work with a very small group: basically me, the producer Gregory Jacobs and the unit production manager."[2] He ultimately opted to shoot both films on early models of the RED One rather than 16mm film, but otherwise kept to his plan of shooting the first film anamorphic, and the second with spherical lenses. Soderbergh has also stated that the films were being made with no U.S. financing: "It was very frustrating to know that this is a zeitgeist movie and that some of the very people who told me how much they now regret passing on Traffic passed on this one too. But as it turned out, we have all the financing we need without an U.S. distribution deal."[2]
[edit] Cast
- Benicio del Toro as Ernesto "Che" Guevara
- Benjamin Bratt
- Franka Potente as Tamara Bunke
- Lou Diamond Phillips as Mario Monje
- Kahlil Mendez as Urbano
- Julia Ormond as Lisa Howard
- Edgar Ramirez as Ciro Redondo
- Catalina Sandino Moreno
- Demián Bichir as Fidel Castro
[edit] Reception
Guerrilla will be screened with The Argentine on May 21 at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival as one motion picture reportedly running over four hours entitled, Che.[3]
[edit] Cannes reaction
Both films have been pre-sold to several major territories, including France, the United Kingdom, Scandinavia, Italy, Japan (Nikkatsu), and Twentieth Century Fox has buying the Spanish theatrical and home video rights. Early reviews of the two films were mixed.[4]
James Rocchi, praised it as "bold, beautiful, bleak and brilliant," and called it "a piece of entertainment that delivers excitement, pathos and pure film making passion; it's a work of art worth thinking about and arguing about, one that opens up possibilities and encourages you to think and feel without telling you how you should think and feel."[5]
Todd McCarthy was more mixed in his reaction to the films in their present form, describing them as "too big a roll of the dice to pass off as an experiment, as it’s got to meet high standards both commercially and artistically. The demanding running time also forces comparison to such rare works as Lawrence of Arabia, Reds and other biohistorical epics. Unfortunately, Che doesn’t feel epic - just long."[6] Anne Thompson wrote that Benicio del Toro "gives a great performance", but predicted that "it will not be released as it was seen here."[4]
Glenn Kenny wrote, "Che benefits greatly from certain Soderberghian qualities that don't always serve his other films well, e.g., detachment, formalism, and intellectual curiosity."[7]
Peter Bradshaw, in his review for The Guardian, wrote, "Perhaps it will even come to be seen as this director's flawed masterpiece: enthralling but structurally fractured - the second half is much clearer and more sure-footed than the first - and at times frustratingly reticent, unwilling to attempt any insight into Che's interior world."[8] In his review for Esquire,
Stephen Garrett criticized the film for failing to show Che's negative aspects, "the absence of darker, more contradictory revelations of his nature leaves Che bereft of complexity. All that remains is a South American superman: uncomplex, pure of heart, defiantly pious and boring."[9]
Richard Corliss had problems with del Toro's portrayal of Che, writing, "And Del Toro — whose acting style often starts over the top and soars from there, like a hang-glider leaping from a skyscraper roof — is muted, yielding few emotional revelations, seemingly sedated here . . . Che is defined less by his rigorous fighting skills and seductive intellect than by his asthma."[10]
In his review for Salon.com, Andrew O'Hehir praised Soderbergh for making "something that people will be eager to see and eager to talk about all over the world, something that feels strangely urgent, something messy and unfinished and amazing. I'd be surprised if "Che" doesn't win the Palme d'Or . . . but be that as it may, nobody who saw it here will ever forget it."[11]
[edit] Soderbergh answering critics
On shooting in Spanish:
| “ | You can't make a film with any level of credibility in this case unless it's in Spanish. I hope we're reaching a time where you go make a movie in another culture, that you shoot in the language of that culture. I'm hoping the days of that sort of specific brand of cultural imperialism have ended.[12] | ” |
On the length:
| “ | The further you get into it, it felt like if you're going to have context, then it's just going to have to be a certain size.[12] | ” |
On the unconventional structure:
| “ | I find it hilarious that most of the stuff being written about movies is how conventional they are, and then you have people ... upset that something's not conventional. The bottom line is we're just trying to give you a sense of what it was like to hang out around this person. That's really it. And the scenes were chosen strictly on the basis of, 'Yeah, what does that tell us about his character?'[12] | ” |
[edit] Awards
Benicio del Toro was awarded the Prix d'interpretation masculine (or Best Actor) for his performance in both films and in his acceptance speech dedicated his award "to the man himself, Che Guevara and I want to share this with Steven Soderbergh. He was there pushing it even when there [were lulls] and pushing all of us."[13]
[edit] See also
- The Argentine (film)
- Che!
- Che Guevara in popular culture
- Legacy of Che Guevara
- The Motorcycle Diaries (film)
[edit] References
[edit] Notes
- ^ "Soderbergh plans Guevara double bill", The Guardian, October 31, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-07-20.
- ^ a b Taubin, Amy. "Degraded Dupes Steven Soderbergh", Sight and Sound, March 2007. Retrieved on 2007-07-20.
- ^ Wells, Jeffrey. "Lawrence of Latin America", The Huffington Post, April 28, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-05.
- ^ a b Thompson, Anne. "Cannes: Che Meets Mixed Response", Variety, May 21, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
- ^ Rocchi, James. "Cannes Review: Che", Cinematical, May 21, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
- ^ McCarthy, Todd. "Che", Variety, May 21, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
- ^ Kenny, Glenn. "The Revolution By Night: Steven Soderbergh's Che", indieWIRE, May 22, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
- ^ Bradshaw, Peter. "Che", The Guardian, May 22, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
- ^ Garrett, Stephen. "First Look from Cannes: A Review of Steven Soderbergh's Che", Esquire, May 22, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
- ^ Corliss, Richard. "Soderbergh and Tarantino: Warrior Auteurs", Time, May 22, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
- ^ O'Hehir, Andrew. "Soderbergh's spectacular Che-volution", Salon.com, May 22, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
- ^ a b c "Got 4 hours to kill? Steven Soderbergh can help", CNN, May 23, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
- ^ Hernandez, Eugene; Brian Brooks. "Laurent Cantent's The Class Wins the Palme d'Or", indieWIRE, May 25, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-25.
[edit] External links
- Guerrilla at the Internet Movie Database
- Guerrilla at Allmovie
- Steven Soderbergh video Interview
- "Del Toro Goes Guerrilla" by Josh Grossberg at E! News
- Guerrilla film details at the official Cannes Film Festival website
- /Film "First Look: Steven Soderbergh’s The Argentine and Guerrilla"
- MSNBC: "Che" More Informative Than Inspiring May 24 2008
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