Ok, because you guys have frequently talked about this movie being shown at Cannes in the comments section, here’s a little update for you on the current status of the epic biopic of Latin American revolutionary Che Guevara.
Both back-to-back Stephen Soderbergh shot biopics The Guerilla and The Argentine were shown as one 4 hour and 18 minute length feature titled CHE which was only broken up by an intermission (only one credits sequence) and it quickly became the festival darling of the critics, who now expect the director to easily walk away with the Palm d’Or prize.
Great reviews from Cinematical…
Che is everything a biopic should be, and del Toro’s performance is nothing short of astounding. And yes, the film needs to be that long, and it needs — MUST — be shown elsewhere just as it is here; not as two separate films, but as one epic masterpiece with a brief intermission between Cuba and Bolivia.
The tale is the tale, and it’s told straight and true. Benicio del Toro’s Guevara portrayal is, as expected, a flat-immersion that can’t be called a “performance” as much as…I don’t know, some kind of knock-down, ass-kick reviving of the dead. Being, not “acting.” I loved the lack of sentimentality in this thing, the electric sense that Soderbergh is providing a real semblance of what these two experiences — the successful Cuban revolution of ‘57 and ‘58, and the failed attempt to do the same in Boliva in ‘67 — were actually like.
Though some, like Variety’s Todd McCarthy were critical of Soderbergh’s direction and the film’s length…
If the director has gone out of his way to avoid the usual Hollywood biopic conventions, he has also withheld any suggestion of why the charismatic doctor, fighter, diplomat, diarist and intellectual theorist became and remains such a legendary figure; if anything, Che seems diminished by the way he’s portrayed here.
…“Che” is 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.
Benico del Toro has also been spoken of as a real potential Oscar candidate for his transformation into the dictator.
The next leap for the film will be to find a distribution deal that will best showcase the movie. Clint Eastwood didn’t quite hit it right when he released Letters from Iwo Jima and Flags of Our Fathers as two close together but separately released films and we all know what happened with Grindhouse!
Lots of decision making to be had. Releasing a four hour biopic is a risky move but so is splitting it into two movies where people will be put off paying to see it twice.
Categories: Benicio-Del-Toro, Che, Movie News, Stephen-Soderbergh, The Guerilla, The-Argentine
Im am extremely excited about seeing this. A running time of over 4 hours does not sound fun so to reease it as a two movie split would be ideal for cinemas. It’s quite a conundrum.
Whichever way they release it, I reckon the golden name of Guevara, the buzz around Benicio del Toro’s performance and an efficient publicity campaign and critical praise will draw people in.
Comment by James Clayton | May 22, 2008
Thanks for this update … after the Indy 4 bizarre debates this news are quite refreshing … Benicio Del Toro born to play this character and I hope he receives at least a nomination for every award. I admire Guevara, but I don’t share his ideology … nevertheless he is an icon and in many ways he represents the hope for social justice that was lost some years ago in latinamerica.
I just want to say one thing … he was not a dictator … Fidel Castro is the dictator … After the revolution succeed in Cuba, Che chose to continue his mission of freedom in other countries, including Africa. That is why people around the world admire him and don’t feel the same for Castro … Fidel was seduced by the power of politics and turn to the dark side to become the cuban dictator (sorry for the Star Wars terminology, I’m just trying to make a point). I would like to see the movies back to back … I read a 700 pages book about Che so I wouldn’t mind to watch a 4 hour movie. After “The Dark Knight”, this production is the one that captures all my interest … and also I read somewhere that Sodebergh and Del Toro produced a documentary about Che to go side by side with the movies. This way we’ll have a kind of trilogy about this important historic figure.
Comment by JAM | May 22, 2008
really?? i just read that the movie was “panned” by critics http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/05/21/cannes-wednesday-madonna_n_102939.html
i really hope you are right because i’ve been dying to see this. is it me or does this che cannes situation have a striking parallel with Entourage and the whole medellin cannes debacle?
Comment by ampac | May 22, 2008
I’m disappointed to hear the biopic will focus on Che’s later years and not more on his growing up when he formed his beliefs. Non the less, this should be a great film, like a kind of sequel to the Motorcycle Diaries.
Comment by Chase Adams | May 23, 2008
how do i view this movie? Im dying to see it?
Comment by melanie | May 27, 2008