IMDb RATING
7.6/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Soda Stereo, Café Tacvba, Aterciopelados and others feature in this 50-year history of Latin American rock through dictatorships, disasters and dissent.Soda Stereo, Café Tacvba, Aterciopelados and others feature in this 50-year history of Latin American rock through dictatorships, disasters and dissent.Soda Stereo, Café Tacvba, Aterciopelados and others feature in this 50-year history of Latin American rock through dictatorships, disasters and dissent.
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
Loved it. Very touching. It summarizes amanzingly how Rock en tu Idioma came to be. Really liked the format, following the timeline. Nowadays, many like to tell stories playing with flashbacks, going back and forth. I am glad this was not the case as I could remember it all as I lived it. I found it fast paced tho'... or maybe I was just enjoying too much.
I enjoyed the first part of the documentary, showing the early stages of rock, the political circumstances that model the artist. Then this documentary turns into cheap and gross propaganda of Gustavo Santaolalla bands.
In the part of the 90s to the actuality only talks about the commercial (complacent rock as Santaolalla says) and left behind the really popular bands like La Renga, Ataque 77, Callejeros (Only named for Cromagnon), Rata Blanca, and many others. The time dedicated to Los Redonditos and Pappo is insulting compared with other artists.
This is a documentary of commercial/complacent rock, not about popular rock.
In the part of the 90s to the actuality only talks about the commercial (complacent rock as Santaolalla says) and left behind the really popular bands like La Renga, Ataque 77, Callejeros (Only named for Cromagnon), Rata Blanca, and many others. The time dedicated to Los Redonditos and Pappo is insulting compared with other artists.
This is a documentary of commercial/complacent rock, not about popular rock.
No es un documental completo, pasan por alto muchas bandas que sentaron las bases del rock en latinoamerica. Es la historia de los grupos producidos por Sanaolalla, pero no es la historia del rock en Latinoamerica.
Hablan de influencia española sin mencionar a Heroes del Silencio u Hombres G? No tiene sentido.
Bueno para perder un par de horas, pero no esperen mucho.
This documentary starts very well on the first and second chapter, after that is a monologue of producer Gustavo Santaolalla's version of RnR for latinamerca, completely biased by the documentary executive producer, yes you gess it correctly "the same santaolalla"
Awesome to see Netflix doing a doc about RnR in Latinamerica!! awful the final product! Don't waste your time as I did!
Awesome to see Netflix doing a doc about RnR in Latinamerica!! awful the final product! Don't waste your time as I did!
If any given rock music fan wanted a comprehensive ride into Latin American rock since 1957, then this documentary is a must-see.
Yet they wouldn't only get just a chronicle. They 'd also catch a glimpse into some of, if not just the most traumatic decades of Latin America's fair share in the Cold War's social struggle and political abuse in America's backyard.
True that the stars and the constellations depicted after the opening eposodes in the chronology are Santaolalla's findings, but this by no means is an exhaustive account but a fair introduction into the force of rock and roll as it naturally thrived on the continent's woes. The music is just great. It explores the many forms rock can be reinvented when it hits context and genius reveals itself in unexpected fusions, subgenres and scenes.
Details
- Release date
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Rompan todo: La historia del rock en América Latina
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was Break It All: The History of Rock in Latin America (2020) officially released in India in Hindi?
Answer