
Dateline: 1980, El Salvador. Correspondent: Richard Boyle, Photojournalist - Guatemala, Iran, Vietnam, Chile, Belfast, Lebanon, Cambodia...
In 1980, an American journalist covering the Salvadoran Civil War becomes entangled with both the leftist guerrilla groups and the right-wing military dictatorship while trying to rescue his girlfriend and her children.
- 7.0
- 1986
- Released
- 2h 3m

James Woods
Richard Boyle
Jim Belushi
Doctor Rock
Michael Murphy
Ambassador Thomas Kelly
John Savage
John Cassady
Elpidia Carrillo
Maria
Tony Plana
Major Maximilliano Casanova
Colby Chester
Jack Morgan
Cynthia Gibb
Cathy Moore
Will MacMillan
Colonel Bentley Hyde Sr.
Valerie Wildman
Pauline Axelrod
José Carlos Ruiz
Archbishop Romero
Jorge Luke
Colonel Julio Figueroa
Juan Fernández
Army Lieutenant
Salvador Sánchez
Human Rights Leader
Rosario Zúñiga
Human Rights Assistant
Giles Millinaire
French Reporter
John Doe
Roberto, Restaurant Owner
Leticia Valenzuela
Woman Rebel
Roberto Sosa
Rebel Youth
Maria Rubell
Boyle's Wife
Ty Granderson Jones
Landlord San Francisco
Sean Stone
Boyle's Baby
Danna Hansen
Sister Stan
Erika Carlsson
Sister Wagner
Kara Glover
Kelly Assistant
María del Carmen Sánchez
Maria's Grandmother
Art Bonilla
Romero Assassin
Gerardo Zepeda
Death Squad #1
Nicolás Jasso
Death Squad #2
José Chávez
Jail Guard
Héctor Téllez
Mayor at Nun's Burial
Jorge Reynoso
Jefe at Customs Shed
Queta Carrasco
Bruja
Arturo Rodríguez Doring
Young Killed Student
Humberto Elizondo
Road Block Thug
Agustín Bernal
Bodyguard to Major Max
Bill Hoag
2nd Immigration Officer![Salvador (1986) Original Trailer [HD]](https://img.youtube.com/vi/JyRHCEt4JHs/hqdefault.jpg)
Released
en
$4,500,000.00
$1,500,000.00
- #guerrilla warfare
- #journalist
- #assassination
- #civil war
- #loss of loved one
- #dictator
- #war correspondent
- #revolution
- #civil rights
- #dictatorship
- #press
- #based on true story
- #road trip
- #el salvador
- #reporter
- #execution
- #massacre
- #alcoholic
- #1980s
- #confession booth
- #photojournalist
- #violence
Reviews

With almost all things Oliver Stone...it gets political, and because of that you have people reviewing the politics and NOT the movie. Hate it or love it because of the politics... ...and politically I agree with the message in Salvador, but I'm going to try to keep all of that out of this and too the side. However, I do want to mention that the film dramatizes a few stories that should have go

You've become just like them. Based around the real life experiences of journalist Richard Boyle, we are in 1980 and Boyle is not only in crisis torn El Salvador, he's also in it up to his neck. It sometimes gets forgotten just what a great director Oliver Stone can be, strip away his ability to ruffle feathers on a seemingly perennial basis, and you find some pieces of work that are stark a











