The Mission (2003)
The Mission Image Cover
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Director:Roland Joffé
Studio:Warner Bros. Pictures
Producer:David Puttnam, Iain Smith, Fernando Ghia, Alejandro Azzano
Writer:Robert Bolt
Rating:8
Rated:PG
Date Added:2014-04-12
Last Seen:2018-08-18
UPC:085392349722
Price:$26.98
Awards:Won Oscar, Another 12 wins & 21 nominations
Genre:Drama
Release:2003-05-13
IMDb:0091530
Location:1364
Duration:118
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:2.35:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 5.1
Languages:English
Subtitles:Svenska
Features:Special Edition
Roland Joffé  ...  (Director)
Robert Bolt  ...  (Writer)
 
Robert De Niro  ...  Rodrigo Mendoza
Jeremy Irons  ...  Father Gabriel
Ray McAnally  ...  Altamirano
Aidan Quinn  ...  Felipe Mendoza
Cherie Lunghi  ...  Carlotta
Chris Menges  ...  Cinematographer
Ronald Pickup  ...  Hontar
Chuck Low  ...  Cabeza
Liam Neeson  ...  Fielding
Bercelio Moya  ...  Indian Boy
Sigifredo Ismare  ...  Witch Doctor
Asuncion Ontiveros  ...  Indian Chief
Alejandrino Moya  ...  Chief's Lieutenant
Daniel Berrigan  ...  Sebastian
Rolf Gray  ...  Young Jesuit
Álvaro Guerrero  ...  Jesuit
Summary: Featuring a majestic score by Ennio Morricone and lush Oscar-winning cinematography by Chris Menges, Roland Joffé's The Mission examines the events surrounding the Treaty of Madrid in 1750, when Spain ceded part of South America to Portugal, and turns this episode into an allegory for the mid-'80s struggles of Latin America. Two European forces are on hand to win the South American natives over to imperialist ways. The plunderers want to extract riches and slaves from the New World. The missionaries, on the other hand, want to convert the Indians to Christianity and win over their souls. Mendoza (Robert De Niro) is an exploiter dabbling in the slave trade. But after he kills his brother Felipe (Aidan Quinn) in a fit of rage, he seeks redemption and calls upon the missionaries to assist him. After repeatedly climbing a cliff with a heavy weight as penance, Mendoza finds redemption and becomes a devout missionary at a settlement run by Gabriel (Jeremy Irons). The missionaries want to promote a new society in which the natives will live together in peace with the Spanish and the Portuguese. But this concept frightens the royal governors, who would rather enslave the natives than encourage peaceful coexistence between the Europeans and the Indians. They order the mission to be burned to the ground. But this event causes a rift between Gabriel, who wants to pray and pursue peaceful resistance, and Mendoza, who wants to take up arms and fight the Europeans.