IMDb रेटिंग
7.3/10
951
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंDepicts the life and loves of Venezuelan Gen. Simón Bolívar, who helped liberate several Latin American countries from Spain.Depicts the life and loves of Venezuelan Gen. Simón Bolívar, who helped liberate several Latin American countries from Spain.Depicts the life and loves of Venezuelan Gen. Simón Bolívar, who helped liberate several Latin American countries from Spain.
- पुरस्कार
- 8 जीत और कुल 10 नामांकन
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फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Absolutely loved this show. I cried a lot throughout the series because it made me transport myself as if I lived during that time. Beautiful production and amazing actors. Recommend it to others to watch.
10TBelton1
To my understanding, the series appears to have taken a few creative liberties with the actual story, (it was a telenovela after all) but it ultimately remained true to the actual history of Latin America's great liberator Simon Bolivar. I am a student of Latin American History and I certainly studied extensively about Bolivar in college, but I must admit that I never studied much about Simon Bolivar's life as a child or young man, and to my mind, this is where the series really shines in particular. Both of the actors who played Simon Bolivar in his younger years brought a lot of passion and excitement to the character and each helped the viewers relate to Bolivar and understand how he became the man he became. No offense to actor Luis Geronimo Abreu who played Bolivar as an older adult, but I think the director should have stuck with actor Jose Ramon Barreto who played Bolivar as a young man instead of switching actors; since the viewers had already bonded with him as the adult Bolivar during episodes 5-25. In any event, both Maximiliano Gomez Silva, who played Bolivar as a 12-13 year old and Jose Ramon Barreto did a remarkably good job in their portrayals of Bolivar, and there were many other great performances by the supporting cast members; such as Erick Rodriguez, who played Simon Bolivar's mentally disturbed cousin Pablo. I would recommend this series to anyone with a love for history or just as a good bit of drama.
I love anything that has to do with history and I enjoyed this riveting series. I felt some of the acting, especially from a few of the women, was corny and overly dramatized. Some of the musical score did not fit the scene. Other than that, it was so exciting that I binged watched it on Netflix.
I am a great admirer of Simon Bolivar, a true hero who sacrificed everything for an ideal. This series is fantastic in spite of Maduro's comments, one can only admire Bolivar all over again. The wars of independence were atrocious and only a heroic figure like Bolivar - with the education, connection and wealth and resolve to back him-- could have undertaken it. We can only applaud Netflix and Caracol for such an amazing undertaking. The costumes are beautiful, the scenery of Colombia breathtaking, the acting superb and it will help to remind all Americans (North and South ) who Simon Bolivar was. Some reviewers are pedantic. True, Abreu's accent sounds Colombian, but who is to know what Venezuelan accent was two hundred years ago. True, that some battle scenes are not epic, but all 60 episodes are worth watching not once but twice.
People need to watch this knowing that the story is told through dramatic elements associated to Latin telenovelas. If you don't like telenovelas AT ALL, if you've never seen a telenovela, or do not even know any telenovela actors (and trust me, there are many good ones) then the style of this show will be difficult to swallow.
Is it sentimental? Yes. But can we accept Bolivar's early life was full of sadness? His parents died when he was young, his sisters forced to marry relatives they didn't love before turning 15, his teachers left him, his grandfather died soon after he was left under his custody, he did not get along with his last guardian (his uncle Carlos). His oldest sister was forced to marry a crazy cousin and his own wife died within a year of their marriage. Bolivar indeed promised (and kept his promise) to never remarry after Maria Teresa's death. So even though the show seems dramatic and over sentimental, there is substantial historical evidence that life in the colonies have enough material for what we now call dramatic or sentimental.
This series is fairly well documented. They incorporate interesting historical events and achievements into the storyline such as the Balmis Expedition, which was the first vaccination expedition in the history of humanity! They managed to tie this story because the Balmis expedition sailed from La Coruña financed by King Carlos IV around the date when Bolivar married María Teresa del Toro (they married in that city and sailed to Caracas around the years of the expedition).
If you want to watch an entertaining show, full of passionate storylines but from which you can also learn some history on the liberation of the americas... this is a fun show to go! It's not for everyone though and I know the aesthetics will be hard for people who have never associated themselves with Latin culture, but maybe try to be more open minded and relaxed about the style and you'll find great things in it. The acting of young adult Bolivar is great, as well as the actresses playing his sisters, his friends Matea, Dionisio and Hipólita (who were his slaves and family), and his most famous lover, Manuelita Saenz. The first episode does not do justice to how the series as a whole develop, you should skip that first episode completely!
Is it sentimental? Yes. But can we accept Bolivar's early life was full of sadness? His parents died when he was young, his sisters forced to marry relatives they didn't love before turning 15, his teachers left him, his grandfather died soon after he was left under his custody, he did not get along with his last guardian (his uncle Carlos). His oldest sister was forced to marry a crazy cousin and his own wife died within a year of their marriage. Bolivar indeed promised (and kept his promise) to never remarry after Maria Teresa's death. So even though the show seems dramatic and over sentimental, there is substantial historical evidence that life in the colonies have enough material for what we now call dramatic or sentimental.
This series is fairly well documented. They incorporate interesting historical events and achievements into the storyline such as the Balmis Expedition, which was the first vaccination expedition in the history of humanity! They managed to tie this story because the Balmis expedition sailed from La Coruña financed by King Carlos IV around the date when Bolivar married María Teresa del Toro (they married in that city and sailed to Caracas around the years of the expedition).
If you want to watch an entertaining show, full of passionate storylines but from which you can also learn some history on the liberation of the americas... this is a fun show to go! It's not for everyone though and I know the aesthetics will be hard for people who have never associated themselves with Latin culture, but maybe try to be more open minded and relaxed about the style and you'll find great things in it. The acting of young adult Bolivar is great, as well as the actresses playing his sisters, his friends Matea, Dionisio and Hipólita (who were his slaves and family), and his most famous lover, Manuelita Saenz. The first episode does not do justice to how the series as a whole develop, you should skip that first episode completely!
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How many seasons does Bolívar: Una lucha admirable have?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- आधिकारिक साइट
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Bolívar: Una lucha admirable
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