The Motorcycle Diaries Movie Review
The Motorcycle Diaries Review

"The Motorcycle Diaries" Overview

Rating: R
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Walter SallesProducer : Michael Nozik,Edgard Tenenbaum,Karen Tenkhoff
Screenwiter : Jose Rivera
Starring : Gael García Bernal,Rodrigo De la Serna,Mîa Maestro,Mercedes Morân,Jorge Chiarella
Director Walter Salles (Central Station, Behind the Sun) regularly focuses on
the inextricable, inscrutable relationship shared by man and his environment,
and the result is that his films’ hardscrabble Latin American settings are
transformed into active participants in his intimate, humanistic dramas. This
fascination with the natural world is most forcefully realized in The
Motorcycle Diaries, which recounts the life-altering 1952 journey through South
America undertaken by a young Ernesto “Che” Guevara and his friend Alberto
Granado. Imbued with the spirit of the dusty, arid open road and the continent’
s unassuming beauty and variety, this lovely-looking film nominally tracks the
young Che’s political and philosophical awakening as he comes into direct
contact with the generous, friendly working-class men and women whom he would
later champion as a communist revolutionary. Yet this mildly stirring,
dramatically loosy-goosy tale of idealism being born is less effective as a Che
Guevara back-story than as a gorgeous examination of the way our surroundings
help shape us into who we are.
Adapted from both Guevara’s The Motorcycle Diaries and Granado’s Traveling with
Che Guevara by Jose Rivera, Salles’ episodic film follows the intrepid
travelers as they leave family and friends behind in Buenos Aires and head for
the rural countryside riding their beat-up metallic steed dubbed, ironically,
“The Mighty One.” Granado (Rodrigo De la Serna), a 29-year-old biochemist, and
Guevara (Gael García Bernal), a 23-year-old student one semester away from
getting his medical degree, had planned on being gone for four months, but
their eventual odyssey would last twice as long, cover 8,000 miles, and forever
change Guevara’s way of looking at his homeland’s social and economic inequity.
As portrayed by Bernal and De la Serna, Che and Alberto are yin and yang, with
Guevara’s candid, charitable demeanor standing in sharp contrast to the more
gregarious, hedonistic Alberto, and Salles’ film makes great use of their
complementary personalities during the duo’s humorous antics to procure room,
board, and booty from local businessmen and comely beauties. Salles’ focus on
the duo’s push-and-pull chemistry gives the early stages of their trip a
lighthearted joyousness, and Eric Gautier’s expressive, ethereal cinematography
of the Peruvian Andes and Chilean desert makes Che and Alberto’s somewhat
uneventful story – not a whole lot happens during the film’s first two-thirds –
sparsely lyrical.
As the picturesque topography encircling Che and Alberto changes, so do they,
and Salles is initially wise not to weigh his Easy Rider-ish narrative down
with too many explicit allusions to Che’s forthcoming activist zeal. Yet
whereas the travelers’ meager dinner with a disenfranchised indigenous couple
around a campfire is understated and moving, the film’s last third – in which
the exhausted protagonists volunteer at a San Pablo leper colony – falls prey
to overly dramatizing Che’s maturation. Disgusted by how the leper population
is segregated from the staff via the Amazon river (despite the fact that
leprosy is, according to the film, not contagious), Che makes an ideological
act of symbolic brotherhood by not wearing the gloves mandated by the nuns to
foster a negative stereotype of their leper patients. However, the moment –
like Che’s eventual speech at a birthday party – seems, regardless of its
actual authenticity, overly choreographed and didactic. Since The Motorcycle
Diaries is merely the prequel to Che’s historically significant revolutionary
life, the film’s climax feels dramatically wan and incomplete, and even Bernal’
s soulful, charmingly heartfelt performance can’t totally obscure the fact
that, were we not told he was playing “the boy who would be Che Guevara,” the
film would more overtly seem like what it ultimately is: a mildly stirring
coming-of-age drama enhanced by its gorgeous travelogue depiction of diverse
Latin America.
The DVD includes deleted scenes, a making-of featurette, and a handful of other
extras.
When Alberto met Che.
Reviewer: Nicholas Schager



