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No Oscar For Che
The Claremont Institute ^ | January 26, 2005 | Glynn Custred

Posted on 01/27/2005 12:15:20 AM PST by Stoat

No Oscar For Che

By Glynn Custred

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The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences finds itself in a bind. The Spanish language film The Motorcycle Diaries is ineligible for this year's foreign-language Academy Award, not because of the language, nor because the film offends the sensitivities of Hollywood.  Indeed, quite the contrary.  Executive producer Robert Redford's Motorcycle Diaries is the story of the political awakening of young Ernesto Che Guevara, the most salient 20th-century icon of the Left whose Jesus-like face peers at us from countless posters and T-shirts around the world.

No, the problem for the Academy is not the subject matter of the film; it is simply that the Academy has not kept up with "globalization." Academy rules for the best foreign-language category require that a film be submitted by the country in which it originated. Motorcycle Diaries, however, was filmed in five different countries with international financial backing and an international cast and crew, and is thus ineligible for consideration. How Oscar's heart must break.  The quality of the production alone should certainly qualify the film for serious consideration for any cinematographic award, while its content earns it honorable mention in the growing catalogue of leftist Hollywood propaganda.

Motorcycle Diaries tells the story of a trip made in 1952 by the then twenty-four year old Guevara and a friend, both middle class Argentine students who set out on a motorcycle from Buenos Aires in the south all the way to Caracas, Venezuela at the northern end of the continent. The narrative voice is that of the young Guevara speaking from his diaries and the letters home he wrote along the way. The film is a picaresque tale, the escapades of loveable rascals who live by their wits while traveling in a country characterized by hypocrisy, a genre in Western literature that has popular characters from Henry Fielding's Tom Jones to Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn.

Guevara and his companion roam the vast expanse of South America, from the Argentine pampas to the snows and fjord-like lakes of the Southern Andes, then up the length of Chile through the Atacama Desert and the high Andes of the old Inca Empire, ending on the great rivers of the Amazon Basin. The magnificence of South America's landscape is matched in the film by the people the travelers meet along the way, vividly and accurately presented in their regional variety and diversity of human types. One sees the desperation and nobility of poor miners on the bleak altiplano of the high Andes; the patient, gentle descendents of the Inca masses in their distinctive dress and speaking their soft native Quechua or in their halting simple Spanish; and ordinary people, in this case medical personnel, who are dedicated to their profession and to the people they serve.

All of this skilled cinematographic art is mobilized to relate Guevara's ideological odyssey and to depict the purity of his motives and the inherent nobility of his character. Guevara's role in Communism is played down throughout. His introduction to Marxist ideology is limited to only two scenes in which Guevara is shown absorbed in Jose Mariatequi's Seven Essays on the Peruvian Reality, a book that ties all the evils of the long and exploitative history of Peru, and by extension all of Latin America, into one seamless testament according to the teachings of Karl Marx.

The film concludes with Guevara and his friend working as volunteers in a leper colony deep in the Amazon jungle. The dramatic high point is reached when Guevara defies convention, as well as his sometimes debilitating asthma and the swift currents of a river, by swimming across to the other side to spend his last night in the colony with the shunned lepers. "He's coming to us!" says one patient when Guevara's features are discernible in the darkness. Thus is the young Che, a man of immense empathy and courage, willing to risk death in his commitment to the despised and downtrodden of the world. Only at the end of the film does a brief text on a black screen inform the audience that Guevara went on to become a physician and a revolutionary and was murdered by the CIA in the Bolivian jungle.

"Murder" is indeed an appropriate term to use when discussing Ernesto Guevara.  Despite what Motorcycle Diaries would lead a naïve audience to believe, Guevara was not the Christ-like Lamb of God offering himself as a sacrifice for a suffering humanity. He was one of the many ruthless, violent fanatics in the global wave of murders committed on a massive scale during the 20th century in the name of Communism, a holocaust in which some 100 million people worldwide lost their lives. The real story of Ernesto Guevara's place in history, and the deaths for which he was responsible, is told by Cuban journalist Luis Ortega, who knew Guevara personally, in his book Yo Soy El Che, by Daniel James in Che Guevara: a Biography and by Armando M. Lago, author of the soon to be released Cuba: the Human Cost of Social Revolutions.

Lago lists by name fourteen people personally murdered by Guevara while fighting in the Sierra Madre as a part of Fidel Castro's 1956-57 guerilla struggles to seize power in Cuba. Once in power, Guevara became one of the central figures of Castro's dictatorship with 10 confirmed ordered executions in Santa Clara in 1959 and another 156 at La Cabana Fortress Prison. He was also responsible for several thousand more during the first years of the revolution. Guevara was also responsible for those killed in the guerrilla uprisings he sponsored in Latin America, and in which he participated after he had left Cuba. No one knows how many people Guevara personally killed, ordered killed, or who died as a result of his actions. Lago believes the number for Cuba alone is 4,000.

It is said that Guevara was proud of shooting his enemies in the back of the head. He was also vocal in his hatred, and candid in his use of hate as a driving force. "Hatred is an element in the struggle," he said, "unbending hatred for the enemy which pushes a human being beyond his natural limitations…." "A people without hate cannot triumph against the adversary." During the Cuban missile crisis Guevara pushed for war, since a nuclear holocaust, he believed, would purge the world of evil and make way for the rise of a new and better order.

Guevara's whole life as a revolutionary was not one of Christ-like selfless sacrifice, and the distortion depicted in The Motorcycle Diaries, is only another entry in the long gallery of leftist propaganda. Since Redford' s film so clearly reflects the spirit of Hollywood, it is a shame, for them at least, that the anachronistic rules of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences excludes this loving and dishonest homage to a Marxist icon from consideration for Hollywood's highest honor.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: che; cheguevara; communism; communist; hollywood; left; marx; marxism; motorcyclediaries; movie; movies
About the Author:

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1 posted on 01/27/2005 12:15:20 AM PST by Stoat
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To: Stoat

"No soup for you!"


2 posted on 01/27/2005 12:16:46 AM PST by sheik yerbouty
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To: Stoat

Thank you Lord God that the murderous deception of this film will not be allowed to be publicly "honored" by the Academy. May the true "honor" due Che Guevara be allotted to him as he suffers eternal torment and may all the families of those he murdered as well as those who suffered because of his words and deeds be vindicated. Lord, take vengeance on all who attempt to make a false Christ out of this communist cutthroat.


3 posted on 01/27/2005 1:03:31 AM PST by Californiajones ("The apprehension of beauty is the cure for apathy" - Thomas Aquinas)
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To: Stoat

I'm kinda disappointed, actually. I think it would've been great if Hollywood had gone all out in honoring a film brownnosing Che Guevara. It would have finally put the ridiculous claims of denial about their communist sympathies to rest permanently.

Qwinn


4 posted on 01/27/2005 1:07:23 AM PST by Qwinn
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To: Stoat
I'm sure the Hollywood multicultural party crowd is bummed about this, 'cause you know BUSH DID IT!

I wonder if Ed Asner got a part in this?
5 posted on 01/27/2005 1:46:10 AM PST by Barney59 (Now there's a man with an open mind - you can feel the breeze from here!)
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To: Barney59
I wonder if Ed Asner got a part in this?

I could see him as a particularly corpulent leper.....

6 posted on 01/27/2005 1:47:37 AM PST by Stoat
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To: Stoat
You know he said the ONE part he'd particularly love to play is Joe-Joe Stalin, the poor misunderstood, Joe Stalin, of course!
7 posted on 01/27/2005 1:50:05 AM PST by Barney59 (Now there's a man with an open mind - you can feel the breeze from here!)
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To: Barney59
You know he said the ONE part he'd particularly love to play is Joe-Joe Stalin, the poor misunderstood, Joe Stalin, of course!

Yes, I remember him saying that.  Ol' Asner is quite a piece of work isn't he?  Makes millions from Americans and then turns around and tries to convince them that they have a horrible, criminal country.  They must love him in France.

8 posted on 01/27/2005 1:55:25 AM PST by Stoat
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To: Stoat
Bump

I almost bought a Che T-shirt this weekend at the mall.

The greasy pin cushion freak behind the counter was quite pleased that I wanted one to look at one:

.....until I told him it was for target practice.

9 posted on 01/27/2005 4:09:08 AM PST by Popman
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To: Popman
Make that:

The greasy pin cushion freak behind the counter was quite pleased that I wanted one to look at:

.....until I told him it was for target practice.

10 posted on 01/27/2005 4:10:48 AM PST by Popman
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To: Californiajones
It did get two nominations. One for best screenplay and one for, believe it or not, best original song.
11 posted on 01/27/2005 4:21:14 AM PST by CaptainK
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