Mi amigo Hugo

Mi amigo Hugo is a Venezuelan television documentary produced by Venezuelan national broadcaster TeleSur and directed by the American Oliver Stone, a friend of Hugo Chávez, about the late President after his death.

Mi Amigo Hugo
Directed byOliver Stone
Music byAdam Peters
Country of originVenezuela
Original language(s)English
Spanish
Production
Running time52 minutes
Release
Original release
  • 2014 (2014)

Production

The documentary is a short look at the intimate life of Chávez, featuring interviews with his family, friends, and other Latin American politicians. Stone features in much of the film, conversing and embracing Chávez around different sites in Venezuela, with other notable people, like Fidel Castro, Nicolás Maduro, José Vicente Rangel, and Elías Jaua, making smaller appearances.[1][2]

The film was first shown on TeleSur on the first anniversary of Chávez' death, 5 March 2014.[1]

Analysis

Cory Franklin, editorial member of the Chicago Tribune and Washington Examiner, calls director Stone "Chavez's most ardent cheerleader" (sic), and describes the film as "worshipful" towards the leader and a "fulsome love paean"; it concludes that the film is cringeworthy, particularly in retrospect.[2]

Jeffrey Tayler was critical of the film because he believed it would give support to Venezuela's supposed deification of Chávez at the time when the nation's economy was beginning to worsen and both citizens and the government "need to start reassessing their departed leader and begin thinking critically of the way ahead [...] the absolute last thing Venezuelans, or anyone else, needs is more Chávez agitprop". He also questioned Stone's ignorance of what he asserts were lies told straight to his face, and concludes that Stone "needs to evolve".[1]

gollark: > There is currently no way to create a Float literal; they should be generated from operations on Integers.
gollark: You should call then NAP Augmentation Proposals, though, or NAPs for short.
gollark: I reject the proposal.
gollark: What religiiogiinion?
gollark: You're religious? Huh.

See also

References

  1. Tayler, Jeffrey. "Oliver Stone's Disgraceful Tribute to Hugo Chávez". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 2019-06-21.
  2. "The deafening silence of Hollywood's Chavistas". Washington Examiner. 2017-05-01. Retrieved 2019-06-21.
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