Before entering a prestigious American university, Gabriel Buchmann decided to travel the world for one year, his backpack full of dreams. After ten months on the road, he arrived in Kenya d... Read allBefore entering a prestigious American university, Gabriel Buchmann decided to travel the world for one year, his backpack full of dreams. After ten months on the road, he arrived in Kenya determined to discover the African continent. Until he reached the top of Mount Mulanje, Ma... Read allBefore entering a prestigious American university, Gabriel Buchmann decided to travel the world for one year, his backpack full of dreams. After ten months on the road, he arrived in Kenya determined to discover the African continent. Until he reached the top of Mount Mulanje, Malawi, his last destination.
- Awards
- 6 wins & 17 nominations total
Featured reviews
In Tanzania, Gabriel greets his Brazilian girlfriend Cristina (Caroline Abras) and she remains for the Zambian portion of the story. While Cristina's presence give the movie some background into Gabriel, it conversely, also impedes the progress of it. The Kenya and Malawi chapters are interesting as they depict Gabriel exploring alone and having to make friends with the locals he meets along the way. Boyfriend and girlfriend stories are commonplace. Further, the couple end up visiting tourist sites - again, a diminution of the tale's exploration theme. Abras is good in the role, but it smacks of the commercial needs of the filmmakers over their artistic ones.
What's most interesting about the movie is Director Fellipe Barbosa's decision to use the actual people Gabriel met along the way to play themselves, with a couple of exceptions*. While not professional performers, it gives the movie a verisimilitude above and beyond the norm. Barbosa also has the people do voice-overs of their present day feelings for Gabriel, a decade later. It's an interesting device, even if takes some getting used to (one is reminded of Terence Malick's recent work).
The Voice-overs and the Chapters are intended to give the movie a structure, but, it isn't fully satisfying. We never get a true sense of the full year-long journey. Gabriel himself is depicted as a prickly, selfish sort. One gives the Barbosa credit for not making him into a saint, but, it can be difficult to fully identify with him, or his adventure. Ultimately, one feels a bit frustrated - much like Gabriel's trip itself.
* The main exception is Cristina, his girlfriend. Understandable, considering the circumstances.
Authentic, a lot of the characters (seem to) play themselves, multiple languages are used and I believe it was shot in the original locations.
However, it felt very long for 127 minutes, some conversations and scenes are just tedious. I felt like there was too much dialogue at times, balance was lost here and there. But overall a very beautiful film which does a good job and capturing the essence of backpacking and the challenges a traveller faces.
Highly recommend it to anyone who enjoys films such as Into The Wild.
That problem is a constant in Felipe Barbosa's filmography.
What I point in Felipe Barbosa's filmography is a constant problem present in other contemporary filmographies manifested by different forms, in the works of directors like Xavier Dolan, Esmir Filho, Luca Guadagnino for example. The pressure of efficiency. This happens when the director rushes to reach a result of the aesthetical experience intended by his/her film. So he/her detours of the inicial aesthetical proposal of his/her film in order to built images that rapidly, easily and in a too given way provokes certain sensation or emotion. He/her forgets to explore and to extract in every single sequence, in every single shot of that sequence, the especifics aspects that his/her expression brings through his/her particular aesthetical proposal.
That problem keeps the Gabriel e a Montanha in a place close to travel documentary shows that we watch in television.
Backpacking captured. If Lonely Planet was a film, it would be "Gabriel and the Mountain" (2017) by Brazilian director Fellipe Barbosa.
Like travelling. For real. You're there with Gabriel, walking beside him on the slopes of Kilimanjaro, Tanzania or trekking to reach the Sapitwa peak, talking with same people, kissing his girlfriend, jumping from the cliff by a waterfall, drinking wine on a beach in Zanzibar.
Did you know
- TriviaThe director Fellipe Barbosa had access to the photographs taken by the camera that was found along with Gabriel Buchmann's body. With those photographs, Buchmann's notebook and e-mails sent to his family and friends, he could track down the places the tourist visited as well as the people he met. He also found some characters through Facebook.
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Gabriel and the Mountain
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $18,415
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $4,963
- Jun 17, 2018
- Gross worldwide
- $505,769
- Runtime2 hours 11 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1