Salvador Movie Review
Salvador Review
"Salvador" Overview

Rating: R
1986
Cast and Crew
Director : Oliver StoneProducer : Gerald Green,Oliver Stone
Screenwiter : Oliver Stone,Richard Boyle
Starring James Woods, Jim Belushi, Michael Murphy, John Savage, Elpidia Carrillo, Tony Plana, Colby Chester, Cynthia Gibb
It's like two Hunter Thompson characters come to life. In Oliver Stone's
harrowing Salvador, James Woods and James Belushi play two real-life guys named
Richard Boyle and "Doctor Rock." Boyle's a down on his luck journalist (I mean
way down). Rock's a San Francisco deejay. Together they take El Salvador by
storm in an unforgettable musical!
Okay, scratch that last bit. Salvador is actually a gripping docu-drama about
the horrors of the revolution in that country in the mid-1980s. From raped
nuns to the mass dumping of dead bodies, Stone's gaze is unflinching on the
horrors that occurred, and Wood's Boyle is there to document it all, despite an
utter lack of charisma, money, or morality.
But as we learn about the atrocities in Latin America, we also see Boyle's
backbone strengthen, and Salvador's new DVD release lets you experience for
yourself the torture that the cast and crew went through to get this small gem
made. On Stone's commentary track, he breaks from his usual narration M.O. and
instead waxes about the production troubles and budget cheats he took -- saying
that just this once, the ends justified the lying means it took to get the
picture made. In a great documentary about the making of the film, Woods
sounds flabbergasted that he even made it through, professing that he was
almost killed on the set and stormed off in a rage during another incident
(also involving safety). An extra half hour of deleted scenes are alternately
fun and gruesome.
Salvador will likely always be a minor masterpiece in Stone's canon of work,
but it's a solid, if ultimately narrow, effort. In fact, Stone would find
himself competing with himself (over Platoon) for 1986's Best Screenplay
Oscar. He would win neither, as Woody Allen got the trophy for Hannah and Her
Sisters. Now that's war.
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Review by Christopher Null
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