Magellan backdrop
Magellan

Magellan

5.6 / 1020252h 44m

Synopsis

Magellan presents the colonization of the Philippines as a primal, shocking encounter with the unknown and a radical retelling of European narratives of discovery and exploration.

Genre: History, Adventure, Drama

Status: Released

Director: Lav Diaz

Website: https://luxboxfilms.com/magellan/

Main Cast

Gael García Bernal

Gael García Bernal

Fernão de Magalhães

Ângela Ramos

Ângela Ramos

María Caldera Beatriz Barbosa

Ronnie Lazaro

Ronnie Lazaro

Rajah Humabon

Amado Arjay Babon

Amado Arjay Babon

Enrique de Malacca

Dario Yazbek Bernal

Dario Yazbek Bernal

Duarte Barbosa

Hazel Orencio

Hazel Orencio

Reyna Juana

Brontis Jodorowsky

Brontis Jodorowsky

Bishop Fonseca

Baptiste Pinteaux

Baptiste Pinteaux

Father Dela Reina

Bong Cabrera

Bong Cabrera

Rajah Kulambo

Roger Alan Koza

Roger Alan Koza

Alfonso de Albuquerque

Trailer

User Reviews

Call Me Dunham

The real definition of every frame being a painting, it’s truly that beautiful. Magellan is one of the best historical biopic films I’ve ever seen. Shot entirely with static frames, minimal scoring, calm and quiet vibes, and cinematography that’s beautifully serene and soothing to look at. Lav Diaz also boldly portrays the dark side of colonialism and the deceit of European explorers in the past even though, as far as I know (CMIIW), the film is supported by institutions from Portugal and Spain and he conveys all of that with extraordinary beauty. This film isn’t just about recounting the past, but serves as a reminder, showing us how European explorers once tortured, colonized, plundered, and pitted Southeast Asian nations against one another. With this film, we are given a silent witness to how cruelty and human greed can destroy norms and morality.

Louay Jabry

I have never assigned a rating of 1/10 to any film until this one. For all those that have been taken by the cinematography, you have been taken for a ride. The use of a 4:3 ratio, dark, smudgy static wide shot series of 2-4 minutes takes, minimal dialog and acting does not make a great film, especially when it is slow for no reason and lasts almost 3 hours. You couldn't even see the main protagonist's face for the first 70 minutes. The net result is a ludicrous film masquerading as art, a talentless, lazy imitation of Werner Herzog's Aguirre, the Wrath of God.