
The Olympics in Mexico
1969 · Movie · 240 min · ★ 6.1
The Mexican former Olympic swimmer Alberto Isaac had turned to filmmaking after spending time as a newspaper cartoonist, a sports correspondent, and even a ceramist. Isaac and his team (which included Paul Leduc, then a neophyte filmmaker, as an assistant director and Oscar-winning cinematographer Walter Lassally as a cameraman) saw the whole event from a wider perspective than might have been expected. This record of the Mexico City Olympic Games would be a celebration not of national achievement (very few national anthems are heard during the film), but of individual heroism. In addition, the filmmakers emphasized the cultural activities staged during the two weeks of the Games, with performers like Van Cliburn, Duke Ellington, and Martha Graham on hand, alongside artists such as Alexander Calder and Norman McLaren.
Where to watch
Streaming on The Criterion Channel.
4 hours to watch.
Streaming availability and prices may be inaccurate or change — verify with the provider before subscribing.
unSUB's subscription recommendations are informational only, not financial advice.
More value for your money
Similar titles, ranked by watch-hours per subscription dollar.
Details
- Original title
- Olimpiada en México
- Years
- 1969
- Release date
- 1969-08-29
- Language
- Spanish
- Runtime
- 240 min
- TMDB rating
- 6.1/10 (7 votes)
Themes
- sports
- olympic games
Awards & recognition
- Academy Award — Best Documentary Feature Film · 1970 · nominated
Cast & crew
- EL
Enrique Lizalde
as Narrator
- RM
Roberto Morales
as Narrator

Gustavo Díaz Ordaz
as Self
Directed by Alberto Isaac