Review | Cannes 2025: Magellan movie review โ€“ Gael Garcรญa Bernal plays explorer in engrossing epic



4.5/5 stars

The Cannes Film Festival may be hosting yet another virtual-reality programme this year, but the most immersive event on the Croisette in the French seaside city so far has been the premiere of an old-school, two-dimensional, three-hour movie filmed in the classic 4:3 aspect ratio.

Revolving around its titular Portuguese explorerโ€™s expeditions to Southeast Asia in the early 16th century, Magellan is relentlessly engrossing โ€“ an epic in which viewers witness the distress, death and destruction brought about by one manโ€™s delusions of colonial conquest.

By presenting Ferdinand Magellan as a dogmatic, slave-owning colonialist who brooks no dissent from his quixotic mission, Filipino auteur Lav Diaz and his Mexican lead actor Gael Garcรญa Bernal have delivered a subversive portrait of a complicated figure who has long been mythologised as a benign bringer of enlightenment.

Interestingly, Magellan also sets out to undermine the narrative about the explorerโ€™s misdeeds in Diazโ€™s home country as well.

Rather than sticking to the orthodox view of Magellanโ€™s death in the Philippines as a glorious victory against colonialism, Diaz depicts indigenous chieftains as scheming manipulators who use this pigheaded white man as a pawn for their own politicking.

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