Che

:

Critics' Reviews

advertisement
88
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
Benicio Del Toro, one of the film's producers, gives a heroic performance, not least because it's self-effacing.Read Full Review »
88
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
Che looks dazzling, whether the camera is weaving through a battle or trying to bore into Che's haunted soul. Del Toro stands up to Soderbergh's relentless scrutiny. As for the movie, it's a reward to audiences eager to break from the play-it-safe pack. Game on.Read Full Review »
88
Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
The labor applied to Che is apparent, but it would be wrong to characterize the movie as laborious the way it was in, say, 2006's "The Good German," where Soderbergh took great pains to re-create 1940s Hollywood wartime glamour.Read Full Review »
80
Village Voice: J. Hoberman
Every Bolivian sequence has its Cuban parallel, which is why Che's two parts are best seen together. Guerrilla may be the more realized of the two--and could certainly stand on its own--but it is only comprehensible in the light of The Argentine. Elevating Guerrilla to tragedy, The Argentine puts some hope in hopelessness--and even in history.Read Full Review »
75
Philadelphia Inquirer: Steven Rea
What this slow-moving but fascinating two-part portrait does do is hunker down in the jungles and mountains of Cuba and (in the second part) Bolivia, capturing in keen, almost Zen-like detail the trudging and trekking, the recruiting and strategizing, the fighting and the philosophizing.Read Full Review »
70
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Sheri Linden
The political realities of his legacy can be endlessly debated, but in this flawed work of austere beauty, the logistics of war and the language of revolution give way to something greater, a struggle that may be defined by politics but can't be contained by it.Read Full Review »
70
The New York Times: A.O. Scott
Mr. Soderbergh once again offers a master class in filmmaking. As history, though, Che is finally not epic but romance. It takes great care to be true to the factual record, but it is, nonetheless, a fairy tale.Read Full Review »
70
Salon.com: Andrew O'Hehir
I was never bored, in four hours-plus. Whether or not it ends up becoming a great film (or films), this is miles and miles beyond anything I thought Soderbergh could create from this material.Read Full Review »
67
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Owen Gleiberman
As political theater, Che moves from faith to impotence, which is certainly a valid reading of Communism in the 20th century. Yet as drama, that makes the second half of the film borderline deadly.Read Full Review »
63
USA Today: Claudia Puig
Che is a mass of contradictions, perhaps like the iconic revolutionary himself.Read Full Review »
See all Che reviews at metacritic.com »