As they navigate their lie, they meet Chel (voiced by Rosie Perez), a sharp-tongued native woman who quickly figures out they are not gods but agrees to keep the secret for a cut of the treasure. What ensues is a race against time as the high priest Tzekel-Kan (a brilliantly unhinged Armand Assante) smells the fraud and plots human sacrifice. One of the most breathtaking aspects of The Road to El Dorado is its visual aesthetic. Released at the tail end of the 2D animated era, it represents a high-water mark for hand-drawn craftsmanship. DreamWorks, eager to compete with Disney, employed some of the best animators in the industry.
DreamWorks has never officially confirmed any queer reading, but the cultural impact is undeniable. Fan fiction, fan art, and "shipping" culture surrounding Miguel and Tulio is massive. They represent a healthy, chaotic, co-dependent relationship where the man and the woman (Chel) isn't the love triangle; rather, Chel becomes their "partner in crime" (frequently depicted in fan spaces as a polyamorous trio). The Road to El Dorado
For the two swindlers, the answer is no. They choose friendship over fortune. They choose adventure over safety. They choose the road. As they navigate their lie, they meet Chel
Yet, the film endures. It endures because of the chemistry between Miguel and Tulio. It endures because of Elton John’s bangers. It endures because it dares to ask: If you found a city of gold, would you really want to leave? Released at the tail end of the 2D
Why does this resonate? Because it is accidental representation. Miguel and Tulio love each other unconditionally, without the toxic masculinity of other 90s animated heroes. They hug freely, cry, and prioritize each other over gold. In a landscape starved for male vulnerability, El Dorado delivered. 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.
In the vast landscape of animated cinema, the turn of the millennium was a peculiar time. Sandwiched between the Disney Renaissance of the 1990s and the CGI revolution led by Shrek and Toy Story , DreamWorks Animation was finding its footing. While The Prince of Egypt earned critical reverence and Shrek would soon dominate pop culture, one film slipped through the cracks upon release but has since been polished into a glittering gem by the internet: The Road to El Dorado .
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.