Simón Bolívar luchó más de 100 batallas contra el Imperio español en América del Sur. Cabalgó más de 70,000 millas a caballo. Sus campañas militares cubrieron dos veces el territorio de Alej... Leer todoSimón Bolívar luchó más de 100 batallas contra el Imperio español en América del Sur. Cabalgó más de 70,000 millas a caballo. Sus campañas militares cubrieron dos veces el territorio de Alejandro Magno. Su ejército nunca conquistó- liberó.Simón Bolívar luchó más de 100 batallas contra el Imperio español en América del Sur. Cabalgó más de 70,000 millas a caballo. Sus campañas militares cubrieron dos veces el territorio de Alejandro Magno. Su ejército nunca conquistó- liberó.
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 3 nominaciones en total
- Simon Bolivar
- (as Édgar Ramírez)
- Voice Over
- (as Marta García de Polavieja)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
The movie itself is not at fault in any unique way. It's always been fashionable to produce scripts that use history in order to create a fantasy world. Marketing strategies determine the perspective to adopt and if historical fact gets in the way few will notice.
Still, it provides a point of view, a simplistic one but a contribution nonetheless. If you use it to motive you to dig deeper, power to you. If you don't, well, you will at least be moderately entertained.
Godspeed.
Watching this tempts me to compare and contrast with another of America's much-loved founding fathers, George Washington. If you look at the details of their achievement, for better or worse - one wonders how much of their legacy derives from the fact that although both were born into power and privilege - one ended up the richest North American of the day and the owner of numerous slaves and slave employing interests, and the other ended up dead under suspicious circumstances after having clearly declared himself a true champion of the average person - of any race.
Libertador caught me since the beginning with the excellent plays of Maria Theresa (Maria Valverde) and of course Simon Bolivar (Edgar Ramirez). And later Simon was taking high personality like a snowball down a mountain. I catch the idea Simon was a natural young boy with revolutionary ideas, but at starts, it was just a boy. In my technical analysis about the movie I have to say I loved the photography edition, also the customs used by actors, the landscapes scenes were awesome. Particularly the journey through the snowed mountains was really touching (speaking in a technical and dramatical way) .
In summary, I would recommend you to watch this movie.
If only the script were on the same level. Part biopic and part cinematic history lesson, the film ties to capture almost the entirety of Simon Bolivar's life in under two hours. Instead of choosing a slice of the life of one of the most complex historical figures of the nineteenth century, as Spielberg's Lincoln did effectively, Arvelo foolishly tried to rush us through his entire career, from his time as a young landowner, to a dilettante in Paris, to an almost Moses-like figure liberating an entire continent. Such ambition is nearly impossible to pull off, and what we get is a Wikipedia-like biography on celluloid. We follow Bolivar around without ever understanding motives, emotional or political. The narrative devices are equally problematic. Forced, unnatural dialogue is mixed with shots of Bolivar penning letters while we hear unconvincing voice-overs in Spanish, English and French. As the movie progresses, the less time the director has in explaining the historic or personal issues, and mere minutes are spent in political battles that lasted years. During the last half hour, the film opts for slogans, name-calling and unashamed hero worship.
Edgar Ramirez, who was riveting in Assaya's Carlos, plays the title character and doesn't quite know what to do with the role. He has a screen presence, but he cannot do much with a film has little time for character development. Ramirez is most comfortable in the early scenes, as a sorrowful young widower, but the progression from aristocratic landowner to military commander and towering political leader is unconvincing and he becomes increasingly unlikable. The English banker Torkington (the great Danny Huston), is the only other memorable character, but later in the film is turned into a capitalist-cartoon villain that seems like something out of a propagandist's imagination.
Arvelo, the director, confessed in a Variety interview that "screenwriting is quite possibly the weakest element in Latin American filmmaking." How could I disagree? Still, the accomplishments of the film are undeniable. The film is a visual spectacle, best seen in a large screen, and at the very least left me wanting for someone else to try a real character study of Bolivar.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaOfficial submission of Venezuela to the best foreign language film category of the 87th Academy Awards 2015. Made the shortlist of 9 films.
- Citas
Simón Rodriguez: I feel sorry for you, Simon. You're so poor that the only thing you have is money.
- ConexionesFeatured in Cine Invisible (2023)
Selecciones populares
- How long is The Liberator?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 50,000,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 113,067
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 69,992
- 5 oct 2014
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 5,082,098
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 59 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1