Che Movie Review
Che Review
"Che" Overview

Rating: NR
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Steven SoderberghProducer : Laura Bickford,Steven Soderbergh,Benicio Del Toro
Screenwiter : Peter Buchman,Benjamin A. van der Veen
Starring : Benicio Del Toro,Demián Bichir,Rodrigo Santoro,Catalina Sandino Moreno,María D. Sosa,Carlos Bardem,Joaquim De Almeida,Eduard Fernández,Marc-André Grondin,Lou Diamond Philips,Franka Potente
Benicio Del Toro dons the insurrectionist garb and machetes his way through
jungles and mud as the revolutionary icon Ernesto "Che" Guevara in Steven
Soderbergh's massive biographical homage. Del Toro pulls out all the stops in
portraying the revolutionary icon and, if anything, Che is a tribute to Del
Toro's perseverance. But Soderbergh's version of Che is too good to be true:
Movie Che is a towering idealist who just keeps on coming, but he lacks any
sense of character. He is heartless, all computer chips and wires inside. He's
the Revolutionator.
Soderbergh's relentlessly uncommercial enterprise logs in at 268 minutes and is
split into two parts. Part One charts Che's involvement with Fidel Castro in
overthrowing Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista, concentrating on the popular
grassroots campaign that began with 80 peasants. Part Two jumps to Guevara's
final revolutionary sprint, the failed uprising in Bolivia, the antithesis of
the Cuban campaign, where the Bolivian peasants abandon him and betray him to
the Bolivian army. Che is then hunted down like a junkyard dog and murdered.
Soderbergh and screenwriters Peter Buchman and Benjamin A. van der Veen present
both sections as in-depth chronicles of military campaigns, and history buffs
will be slobbering as they chart each skirmish and surprise attack. The Cuban
campaign in Part One unfolds in widescreen glory, Soderbergh adeptly using the
wide frame to convey the popular outpouring of support for the upstart
revolutionaries. Del Toro has Che lapse into bouts of asthmatic coughing which,
thanks to revolutionary success, he manages to keep under control. The
successful Cuban campaign is intercut with black-and-white shots of Che being
interviewed on a visit to New York City after the Cuban revolution, where he
addresses the United Nations. This section is all tied up in a bow when Che
says, "When we're done in Cuba, I will bring the revolution to all of Latin
America."
Part Two jumps to the doomed Bolivian campaign and the composition constricts
to 1.85:1, successfully entombing Che in the frame and sealing his doom. This
section is completely chronological and lurches forward with titles announcing
the passage of days until Day 341 is reached. In this failed campaign, the
military strategies and the battles are continually undercut and lost and Che's
asthma gets a lot worse. The peasants abandon him and after Day 341, time slows
down to a crawl as Che is captured by the army and executed.
Soderbergh presents the two campaigns like a military wonk reporting on CNN,
rendering the whole enterprise academic. Despite that, for this reviewer the
film was not an unending bore as others have argued, but rather a fascinating,
intriguing experiment that, though almost five hours in length, actually zips
along... for what that's worth. Sadly, it's not worth much. It is Classics
Illustrated junk food history being told: Not a film but an illustration, a
hagiographic veneer, like one of those Stalin films the U.S.S.R. made at the
height of World War II to rally the populace behind their fearless leader. But
who are the people (if anyone) watching this film meant to rally behind? Who is
this Che?
Soderbergh's Che is a shallow, artificial archetype. In the film, Che calls
himself a pure revolutionary, which is "the highest level of humanity." Like a
wildcat oil-rigger insurrectionist, Che "goes where he is needed." But this Che
never has to explain what his revolutionary ideals are. The closest he gets to
any kind of response is when an interviewer asks him, "What is the most
important quality for a revolutionary to possess?" And he banally responds,
"Love." Here we have a Che who keeps exhorting his underlings to "stay
focused," but focused on what we are not given a clue.
Worse, there is no narrative drama, no psychological depth, and no exploration
of Guevara's personal history (his marriages, his family, what shaped him).
Soderbergh asks us to accept Che without thinking or coming to any conclusions
about him. As a result, in Part One, Che comes across like a subject out of
Leni Riefenstahl; in Part Two, his tortures of the damned could have been
directed by Mel Gibson.
Because of the vacuum created by the main character, Che unravels. There is a
scene in Woody Allen's Deconstructing Harry in which a character written by the
protagonist is not fully developed and not fully focused in the author's mind.
As a result, when the fiction is imaged on screen, all the characters in the
frame are in focus except for the one unfocused character, who is seen,
literally out of focus in the shot. In Che, Che Guevara is an amorphous blur in
his own film.
Aka Guerilla.
Did they have bullet time back then?
Reviewer: Paul Brenner





