Two swindlers get their hands on a map to the fabled city of gold, El Dorado.Two swindlers get their hands on a map to the fabled city of gold, El Dorado.Two swindlers get their hands on a map to the fabled city of gold, El Dorado.
- Awards
- 1 win & 12 nominations total
Kevin Kline
- Tulio
- (voice)
Kenneth Branagh
- Miguel
- (voice)
Rosie Perez
- Chel
- (voice)
Armand Assante
- Tzekel-Kan
- (voice)
Edward James Olmos
- Chief
- (voice)
Jim Cummings
- Cortes
- (voice)
Frank Welker
- Altivo
- (voice)
Tobin Bell
- Zaragoza
- (voice)
Duncan Marjoribanks
- Acolyte
- (voice)
Elijah Chiang
- Kid #1
- (voice)
Cyrus Shaki-Khan
- Kid #2
- (voice)
Elton John
- Narrator
- (voice)
Bob Bergen
- Jaguar
- (uncredited)
James MacDonald
- Seagull
- (archive footage)
- (archive sound)
- (uncredited)
Featured review
Set in Spain in 1519, two con artists consisting of cynical and street smart Tulio (Kevin Kline) and optimistic dreamer Miguel (Kenneth Branagh) are running a con on several sailors when in a last ditch effort one of the sailors wager's a map that supposedly leads to the fabled golden city of El Dorado in the New World. While Tulio wants to walk away, Miguel convinces Tulio to reluctantly play for the map which they win only for the two's con to be outed leading to them being chased through town. Hiding in some barrels, the two inadvertently stowaway on a boat captained by Hernan Cortes who has no tolerance for Stowaways and imprisons the two with the intention of putting condemning them to slavery in Cuba. With the help of Cortes horse, Altivo, the two eventually escape the ship by boat and along with Altivo wind up on an unfamiliar beach. Discovering the beach has a landmark similar to the one on the map they following it to El Dorado where they're mistaken for Gods by the population and teaming up with a native from the city, Chel (Rosie Perez), they play into the con unaware they're in the middle of a power struggle by the kind but skeptical Chief Tannabok (Edward James Olmos) and the fanatical high priest Tzekel-Kan (Armand Assante).
The Road to El Dorado is a 2000 animated adventure comedy and the sophomore traditional animated feature from Dreamworks following their success on The Prince of Egypt. While initially written as a more dramatic film by screen writers Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, the film was instead turned into a more light-hearted comedic film inspired by the "road" pictures of Bob Hope and Bing Crosby as Katzenberg wanted the studio's next effort to differentiate itself from the seriousness and dramatic weight of Prince of Egypt. Opening at number two at the box office behind Erin Brockovich, The Road to El Dorado was a box office failure only accruing $50 million stateside against a $95 million budget, and only making $76 million worldwide. Critical reception was more mixed with many calling the film's story predictable and lacking in comparison to the studio's prior effort. The Road to El Dorado isn't super ambitious from a story perspective, but in terms of style and character it does have charm.
Easily the best selling point for the film is in the character and acting on display in the film. Kevin Kline and Kenneth Branagh have fantastic chemistry together and apparently they did their recording sessions together and it shows in the final product as their timing in the verbal exchanges are pitch perfect with Kevin Kline's portrayal of Tulio's world-weary cynicism counter balanced against Branagh's portrayal of Miguel's character as a fanciful exuberant dreamer giving the duo a distinct identity and likability as dashing rogues. Rosie Perez is also very good as Chel who serves as an unofficial third member of their group and love interest for Tulio and she's very much cut from a similar cloth to Tulio and Miguel with a strong knowledge of playing the angles. In terms of setup it's not dissimilar from a mashup of Dirty Rotten Scoundrels mixed with the good natured innocence of the Hope/Crosby road pictures. Edward James Olmos is a likable presence Tannabok whose friendship with Miguel is very endearing as Miguel falls in love with the culture and city of El Dorado and Armand Assante is a fun despicable villain driven by fanaticism and a desire to attain power by fear with Assante committed to the role. The movie builds upon the already impressive animation seen in The Prince of Egypt and with a rich color palette used to create Spain, the Jungle, and El Dorado itself there's a rich level of detail on display even if some of the CGI elements haven't aged as gracefully. The characters are nicely expressive and fluidly animated, and the designs are synced up nicely with the vocal work of the voice actors.
There are some weak points to the movie with probably the most glaring one being the songs by award winning duo Elton John and Tim Rice of The Lion King. Now I don't think the soundtrack is bad, far from it, but the songs have an issue similar to Disney's Tarzan where they don't feel organically woven into the story, and instead feel more clumsily grafted on with Elton John himself singing many of the songs "narration style" in similar fashion to the Phil Collins songs from Tarzan, but unlike Collins' soundtrack Elton John's singing isn't egregiously out of place and does try to integrate itself at least somewhat into the atmosphere of what's presented on screen. The presence of Hernan Cortes also is one of those things that's a little head tilting as Cortes is a remnant from when the film had a more dramatic bent and addressed the slaughter of indigenous peoples by the Spanish Conquistadors and of course being the kind of movie this is of course that's not going to be a thing touched upon and while not as clumsily integrated as historical elements of Disney's Pocahontas it is the kind of thing that should be noted.
The Road to El Dorado isn't a classic (nor does it aspire to be) but in terms of providing an enjoyable ride, the film delivers on all the fronts you expect. The songs aren't as well integrated as they could've been in my opinion and some of the historical details left over from the initial draft could've been refined, but it remains a likable comedy thanks to solid chemistry among the cast and some beautiful animation.
The Road to El Dorado is a 2000 animated adventure comedy and the sophomore traditional animated feature from Dreamworks following their success on The Prince of Egypt. While initially written as a more dramatic film by screen writers Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, the film was instead turned into a more light-hearted comedic film inspired by the "road" pictures of Bob Hope and Bing Crosby as Katzenberg wanted the studio's next effort to differentiate itself from the seriousness and dramatic weight of Prince of Egypt. Opening at number two at the box office behind Erin Brockovich, The Road to El Dorado was a box office failure only accruing $50 million stateside against a $95 million budget, and only making $76 million worldwide. Critical reception was more mixed with many calling the film's story predictable and lacking in comparison to the studio's prior effort. The Road to El Dorado isn't super ambitious from a story perspective, but in terms of style and character it does have charm.
Easily the best selling point for the film is in the character and acting on display in the film. Kevin Kline and Kenneth Branagh have fantastic chemistry together and apparently they did their recording sessions together and it shows in the final product as their timing in the verbal exchanges are pitch perfect with Kevin Kline's portrayal of Tulio's world-weary cynicism counter balanced against Branagh's portrayal of Miguel's character as a fanciful exuberant dreamer giving the duo a distinct identity and likability as dashing rogues. Rosie Perez is also very good as Chel who serves as an unofficial third member of their group and love interest for Tulio and she's very much cut from a similar cloth to Tulio and Miguel with a strong knowledge of playing the angles. In terms of setup it's not dissimilar from a mashup of Dirty Rotten Scoundrels mixed with the good natured innocence of the Hope/Crosby road pictures. Edward James Olmos is a likable presence Tannabok whose friendship with Miguel is very endearing as Miguel falls in love with the culture and city of El Dorado and Armand Assante is a fun despicable villain driven by fanaticism and a desire to attain power by fear with Assante committed to the role. The movie builds upon the already impressive animation seen in The Prince of Egypt and with a rich color palette used to create Spain, the Jungle, and El Dorado itself there's a rich level of detail on display even if some of the CGI elements haven't aged as gracefully. The characters are nicely expressive and fluidly animated, and the designs are synced up nicely with the vocal work of the voice actors.
There are some weak points to the movie with probably the most glaring one being the songs by award winning duo Elton John and Tim Rice of The Lion King. Now I don't think the soundtrack is bad, far from it, but the songs have an issue similar to Disney's Tarzan where they don't feel organically woven into the story, and instead feel more clumsily grafted on with Elton John himself singing many of the songs "narration style" in similar fashion to the Phil Collins songs from Tarzan, but unlike Collins' soundtrack Elton John's singing isn't egregiously out of place and does try to integrate itself at least somewhat into the atmosphere of what's presented on screen. The presence of Hernan Cortes also is one of those things that's a little head tilting as Cortes is a remnant from when the film had a more dramatic bent and addressed the slaughter of indigenous peoples by the Spanish Conquistadors and of course being the kind of movie this is of course that's not going to be a thing touched upon and while not as clumsily integrated as historical elements of Disney's Pocahontas it is the kind of thing that should be noted.
The Road to El Dorado isn't a classic (nor does it aspire to be) but in terms of providing an enjoyable ride, the film delivers on all the fronts you expect. The songs aren't as well integrated as they could've been in my opinion and some of the historical details left over from the initial draft could've been refined, but it remains a likable comedy thanks to solid chemistry among the cast and some beautiful animation.
- IonicBreezeMachine
- Mar 15, 2023
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaVoice artists in animated movies usually record their parts alone, with no other actors or actresses in the studio with them. In a break with this tradition, Kevin Kline and Sir Kenneth Branagh recorded their dialogue together similar to when Disney's Aladdin (1992) had Jonathan Freeman record many of his scenes with Gilbert Gottfried.
- GoofsThe main characters make mention of the peseta as a currency. The peseta wasn't introduced until 1869, exactly 350 years after the time the movie is set in.
- Crazy creditsBibo the armadillo appears under the Directed By credit chasing two butterflies, catching one, and then eating it.
- Alternate versionsThe version shown on ABC television has two brief shots of Miguel and Tulio's bare backsides altered by digitally adding white underpants.
- ConnectionsFeatured in HBO First Look: The Road to Eldorado (2000)
- How long is The Road to El Dorado?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- El Dorado
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $95,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $50,863,742
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $12,846,652
- Apr 2, 2000
- Gross worldwide
- $76,432,727
- Runtime1 hour 29 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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