'Sergio': A reinterpretation of the life of Sergio Vieira de Mello

Cast as the titular diplomat, Wagner Moura, the Brazilian actor who starred as Pablo Escobar in the crime series Narcos, shares Vieira de Mello’s good looks and embodies the intelligence and empathy that made the man so good at his job.

Wagner Moura and Ana de Armas in 'Sergio' (photo credit: NETFLIX)
Wagner Moura and Ana de Armas in 'Sergio'
(photo credit: NETFLIX)
Emmy-winning director Greg Barker, known for documentaries set in global hot spots, has not one but two new films. Sergio, Barker’s dramatic reinterpretation of his 2009 nonfiction profile of the late United Nations diplomat Sergio Vieira de Mello, launched Friday on Netflix, and The Longest War, a documentary chronicling US involvement in Afghanistan, premiered Sunday on Showtime in the US.
It’s no wonder that Barker was so intrigued by Vieira de Mello that he returned a decade later for a deeper dive into the life of the charismatic Brazilian. The documentary, also titled Sergio, illustrated Vieira de Mello’s distinguished career carrying out the United Nations’ mission in Bangladesh, Sudan, Mozambique, Cambodia, Kosovo, East Timor and Iraq, expertly framed by a fraught rescue attempt following the 2003 bombing of the UN’s offices in Baghdad. It originally aired on HBO and is also available on Netflix.
Though extremely involving, the documentary left the impression that there was more to the dashing figure, who, like so many other powerful people, pursued his calling to the detriment of his family. It is that man whom Barker, in his narrative debut, and screenwriter Craig Borten, an Oscar nominee for Dallas Buyers’ Club, seek to reveal in the dramatized version of Sergio, meeting with mixed results.
Cast as the titular diplomat, Wagner Moura, the Brazilian actor who starred as Pablo Escobar in the crime series Narcos, shares Vieira de Mello’s good looks and embodies the intelligence and empathy that made the man so good at his job.
But the real casting coup is Knives Out breakout Ana de Armas as Carolina Larriera, the younger UN economist with whom Vieira de Mello found love after marrying young and raising two sons in absentia. Fidelity was never his strong suit, and as he tells Carolina early in their relationship, “I’m not too good with indefinite assignments.”
His conflict over his desire to be with Carolina and his commitment to bring peace to places such as East Timor and Iraq is the center of what is, finally, a love story. Together, Moura and De Armas create the kind of chemistry that filmmakers and audiences dream about. There are enough sparks between the two that a later sex scene seems superfluous.
Unfortunately, rather than fully embracing this conflicted interior view of Vieira de Mello, Barker and Borten have chosen to retain the documentary’s framing device of the rescue attempt.
In the nonfiction film, it served as a propulsive engine, carefully balanced against the interviews that told Vieira de Mello’s story and its tragic conclusion. Here, it feels abstract, disjointed from the scenes with him and Carolina, thus weakening and muddying the story.
It also necessitated the narrative choice to make Gil Loescher, the man trapped with the diplomat in the Baghdad rubble, into a composite character who serves as Vieira de Mello’s chief aide. Irish actor Brian F. O’Byrne has a nice, understated tension opposite Moura in the role, but the characterization is disorienting to anyone who has seen the documentary.
‘SERGIO’
Rated: R (for language, some bloody images and a scene of sexuality)
Running time: 1 hour, 58 minutes
Playing: Available on Netflix
(Los Angeles Times/TNS)