Movie can clarify vision of rebel Che Guevera
February 4, 2008
Last year was the 40th anniversary of the death of mythic, Argentine-born, physician-turned revolutionary, Ernesto ''Che'' Guevara de la Serna. Now, director Steven Soderbergh (''Traffic'') is shooting a film about Guevara, with Oscar winner Benicio Del Toro as Che. In the stills I've seen from location in Spain, Del Toro bears an uncanny resemblance to Guevara.
Reportedly, Soderbergh used recently declassified CIA transcripts as background preparation and there is a responsibility to correct a narrative grievously marred by misinformation, vilification and commercialization since Che's death. That includes the marketing of Alberto Korda's iconic photograph of Che, something that would have appalled him. A few years ago I spotted a teenager wearing a shirt bearing this ubiquitous image. I asked him what he knew about the man. After a moment's hesitation, he replied, ''I think he plays lead guitar for Rage Against the Machine.''
Soderbergh follows the footsteps of Walter Salesh's 2004 film ''The Motorcycle Diaries,'' in attempting to set the early record straight. Salesh tracks Che and his friend Alberto Granada on an eight-month trek across Argentina, Peru, Columbia, Chile and Venezuela.
When leaving his leafy, upper middle-class suburb (his father was an architect) in Buenos Aires in 1952, Guevara is 23 and one semester from earning his medical degree. The two young men embark on a last fling before settling down to careers and lives of privilege. They are preoccupied with women, fun and adventure, not seeking or expecting a life-transforming odyssey.
The film's power is in its depiction of Guevara's emerging political consciousness as a consequence of that experience. During the 8,000-mile journey, they encounter poverty, exploitation and brutal working conditions, all consequences of an unjust international economic order. Influenced by these encounters, Guevara turns away from a medical career, believing that while essential, medicine can only treat the symptoms of poverty. For him, revolution becomes the only way to address suffering's root causes, what Harvard Medical School Prof. Paul Farmer terms politics as medicine on a grand scale.
One hopes that Soderbergh's work builds on Salesh's film and provides context for Che's oft quoted statement that, ''The true revolutionary is guided by a great feeling of love.''
We do know that in 1954, while working for the Guatemalan government, Guevara witnessed the overthrow of the democratically elected, populist Jacobo Arbenz by a CIA-sponsored coup. This experience reinforced Che's belief that peaceful progressive change would not be tolerated by the Colossus of the North.
More:
http://www.mcall.com/news/opinion/anotherview/all-olson2-4.6247349feb04,0,7068751.story
Benicio Del Toro, Che Guevara