ON THE ROAD WITH CHE
DVD REVIEW
The Motorcycle Diaries, 2005
I have reviewed a biography
of the life and works of the Latin American revolutionary (I think that is how
he wanted to see himself) Ernesto “Che’ Guevara elsewhere in this space and
make no bones about my admiration for his revolutionary skills and ardor while
also noting my political differences. In a world that in 2007 is filled to the
brim with fake ‘hero’ that youth are asked to emulate here is the real things.
The film under review is a little difference take on Che’s life from a time
before he became a world known revolutionary fighter and icon. Apparently this
film is based on his diaries written while he and another footloose companion
were traveling the highways and byways of Latin America on motorcycle, foot,
boat, and cart or by any other mode of transportation that would move them to
their objective. During that fateful trip middle class professional (doctor)
Che has his eyes opened both to the geographic beauty of his continent but also
the grim underside of life for the masses. We, unfortunately, are painfully
aware of how that story ends in the hills of Bolivia literally pursuits by all
of the security forces in the Western world.
Does this early life study of
Che work? As a member of the Generation of ’68 I am very, very familiar with
the wanderlust that drove many of my generation to seek salvation and
companionship of kindred spirits on the roads of America and elsewhere. We rode
those Volkswagen buses to the ground or we hitchhiked (nobody does that
anymore, and unfortunately nobody should with all the weirdness out there on
the mean roads of America these days).
Che got the urge before Kerouac’s classic On the Road and we got it as a
result. However that liberation from parental authority and the norms of bourgeois
existence do not in themselves produce anything except an existential traveler.
If one did not know that this was about Che then, while it was interesting,
cinematically beautiful and the
interplay between the two travelers was well-acted then it could have been
about a fair percentage of the children of post-World War II generation. The
missing link is the politics. Here it is hard to say that that on the basis of
what was presented as ‘enlightening’ Che about the miseries of existence on his
travels that he would be led to a revolutionary road. Yes, I know that to
recruit people to revolution these days we will be dealing with bright,
articulate, thoughtful, concerned liberals like Che in this period but I believe
that the makers of this film took a dive on the politics. If they wanted to
honor the memory of Che they did a disservice. If they, as I assume, wanted to ride
the wave of a real icon for international youth then I have real political
differences with their use of Che legacy.
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