The Road To El Dorado -

It would be irresponsible to write a retrospective on The Road to El Dorado without acknowledging its problematic lens. The film is, at its core, about two white Europeans who lie to a Mesoamerican civilization, manipulate their religion, and plan to steal their wealth.

The film tries to have its cake and eat it too. Miguel explicitly states they are "not like the others" (i.e., the conquistadors led by Cortés), but they still use the natives' faith for personal gain. Chel, the only major native character with agency, is sexualized and primarily functions as a romantic interest and guide.

However, the film avoids the worst of the trope by making the natives the smart ones. The Chief (Edward James Olmos) is pragmatic; he doesn't fully believe they are gods but uses the arrival to unite his people against the violent Tzekel-Kan. The ending sees Miguel and Tulio voluntarily leave the gold behind, sailing away with one boatload of treasure, while El Dorado seals itself off from the world, telling the Spanish it was just a myth. The Road to El Dorado

The moral is ambiguous: They are not heroes, but they are not genocidal. They are tourists with a gambling problem. For a children's film, this grey morality is surprisingly adult.


Welcome, traveler! If you have found this guide, you are likely a con artist, a map thief, or simply someone looking for "more to life than this." You have arrived at the definitive resource for navigating the legendary City of Gold. It would be irresponsible to write a retrospective

Disclaimer: The authors of this guide accept no responsibility for any encounters with jaguars, wrathful deities, or Spanish Conquistadors that may occur during your journey.


Originally, The Road to El Dorado was intended to start a franchise. The ending literally sails them off to another adventure (with a map to the "lost city of Delphi"). However, due to the lukewarm critical reception and the industry shift toward CGI, the sequel was scrapped. DreamWorks instead pivoted to Shrek 2, which became a billion-dollar juggernaut. Welcome, traveler

But perhaps that is for the best. El Dorado works perfectly as a standalone artifact. It is a time capsule of a specific era of animation: hand-drawn, adult-skewing humor, massive orchestral scores, and an earnestness that would be immediately undercut by irony in the post-9/11 era.

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