Filled with the vigour and humour of youth and the depth of idealism, but carried on a tide of visceral human experience
The Motorcycle Diaries (2004)
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Reviews Counted:150
Fresh:125
Rotten:25
Average Rating:7.5/10
Consensus: The Motorcycle Diaries is heartfelt and profound in its rendering of the formative experiences that turn Ernesto "Che" Guerva into a famous revolutionary.
Runtime: 2 hrs 7 mins
Genre: Dramas
US Box Office: $16,680,023
Synopsis: In 1952, a young medical student and a biochemist from Argentina set off on a road trip across South America. As they straddled their beaten up motorcycle, the men talked in awed tones of the... In 1952, a young medical student and a biochemist from Argentina set off on a road trip across South America. As they straddled their beaten up motorcycle, the men talked in awed tones of the sights they were about to experience. The record of their trip may have disappeared into the ether if one of the riders departing on that fateful day hadn't been the future insurrectionary figurehead of the Cuban revolution, Ernesto "Che" Guevara (played here by Gael Garcia Bernal). The young Che's companion on the trip was his best friend, Alberto Granado (Rodrigo de la Serna), with their simple goals being to enjoy themselves, and meet some girls along the way. As the trip unfolds at the behest of their spluttering motorcycle, the boys discover more about themselves than they ever imagined possible. Ernesto clings tightly to his ideals throughout, and delights in the opportunity to put them into practice. His refusal to spend the $20 provided by his girlfriend, Chichina Ferreyra (Mia Maestro), constantly angers his travelling companion as the two succumb to pangs of hunger. Ernesto's charitable nature comes to the fore when he reveals that he gave the money to a pair of out-of-work illegal immigrants. The trip winds down as the friends offer their medical expertise to a leper colony in Peru, with the duo's youthful folly acquiescing to adulthood, and the dawning realization of where they should head in life. Based on the books THE MOTORCYCLE DIARIES (by Guevara) and TRAVELLING WITH CHE GUEVARA (by Granado), director Walter Salles (CENTRAL STATION) pulls some highly accomplished performances from his two leads. The South American landscape is breathtakingly captured on camera, with Salles vividly reproducing a continent beleaguered by poverty and disease, but containing a population in possession of an unshakeable sense of optimism, as beautifully personified by Guevara and Granado. [More]
Starring: Gael Garcia Bernal, Rodrigo de la Serna, Mia Maestro, Mercedes Moran
Starring: Gael Garcia Bernal, Rodrigo de la Serna, Mia Maestro, Mercedes Moran, Jorge Chiarella, Erto Pantoja
Director: Walter Salles
Director: Walter Salles
Screenwriter: Jose Rivera
Producer: Edgard Tenenbaum, Michael Nozik, Karen Tenkoff
Composer: Gustavo Santaolaya
Studio: Focus Features
Reviews for The Motorcycle Diaries
The insertion of documentary rigor into something as ravishing as The Motorcycle Diaries smacks, I fear, of the picturesque.
A romanticized and lightweight road movie, a charming diversion, rather than the incisive biographical work that it should have been.
Essentially an overly long endurance test, and it wears us out by the end.
A film about the sowing of revolution designed for the approval of bourgeois gentlefolk -- for the very type of person that Che, once one himself, would not think twice about putting a bullet into.
Left me less than sated and unprepared for its apolitical stance on a subject who was known for his leftist radicalism.
Motorcycle Diaries is a film without a face, a story for those who’d rather idealize their revolutionary figures than truly know them.
The relentless hagiography by Salles and screenwriter Jose Rivera results in a bloodless exercise.
Unfortunately, the film was directed by Brazilian filmmaker Walter Salles. This is the equivalent of getting Mike Nichols or Ron Howard to direct a biopic of Sid Vicious.
Lovely to look at but insipid, a lavishly illustrated Rough Guide to white liberal self-affirmation.
The cinematic equivalent of a Che T-shirt: stylish and nice to look at, sure, but completely simplistic and misguided.
Overall the film is like a series of pretty postcards with poor people - Masterpiece Theatre for Marxists - offering little in political insight.
Director Walter Salles doesn’t succeed in allowing viewers to capture Guevara’s epiphany in anything but their heads.
Latest News for The Motorcycle Diaries
September 21, 2006:
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Four new films open wide, but they may not be enough to stop the North American box office from suffering its third consecutive down weekend. More...
August 05, 2005:
Salles & Copolla to Go "On the Road" Together
Director Walter Salles and producer Francis Ford Coppola plan to bring Jack Kerouac's classic book "On the Road" to the silver screen, according to The Hollywood... More...
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