It is a piece of cake to face hunger and starvation, and even to fight against the world's most hegemonic America alone with a physical body. After years of planning for the birth and death organization, after Cuba’s independence, he did not remember the honor of being championed like a hero. He quickly invested in a weak country that needed him more and began a difficult struggle. When he was killed, he was only 39 years old. ---Che Guevara!
The film is based on Che Guevara’s diary, directed by Steven Soderbergh, the American director of "Sex, Lies, and Videotape," and is led by Puerto Rican actor Benicio del Toro. It is divided into two episodes. . The first episode was heart-warming, with various jungle guerrilla warfare to celebrate the independence of Cuba, interspersed with black-and-white clips of participating in United Nations meetings and various interviews with voice-overs, and the narrative process was in the form of multiple clues. The next episode is more boring and helpless. There is no competent partner, and the uncivilized personnel trained in the mountainous areas are shuttled back and forth, until they are betrayed and fell under the gun. It is very pitiful and desolate, and makes people lament the sadness and aspiration of the hero's end.
Although the actor Benicio del Toro is too old-fashioned and not as youthful and beautiful as Che Guevara himself, he still presents this legendary figure to the audience again, deducting all kinds of hardship and embarrassment. Tenacious struggles between power groups. The appearance of Edgar Ramirez, the actor of Matt Damon and Jackal Carlos, in the film is surprising. Although the film has many flaws, it does not prevent us from cutting. Che Guevara’s worship, the true face and three-dimensional life of "the most perfect person in the world".
View more about Che: Part Two reviews