Editor's Note: The quotes in this article have been translated from Spanish to English. Y Tu Mamá También is one of those films where once you’ve seen the ending, the entire film becomes a different ...
style. There’s an action going on here, but the camera has its own comments. For us, it was so liberating. Four years ago, we would have thought it was horrible. We were framing shots and I was like, ...
[EDITOR’S NOTE: Peter Brunette reviewed “Y Tu Mama Tambien” during the 2001 Toronto Film Festival. The IFC Films feature is being released today.] The two boys are obscene motormouths, and their ...
In “Subtitled,” Emmett Chung ’27 explores world cinema through reviews of non-English films. “Once you overcome the one-inch-tall barrier of subtitles, you will be introduced to so many more amazing ...
Chance Solem-Pfeifer is a film critic and arts journalist. He hosts "The Kick" movie podcast on the Now Playing Network and is a founding member of the Portland Critics Association.
Two randy teenagers (Gael Garcia Bernal and Diego Luna) hook up with a restless older woman (Maribel Verdu) for a Mexican joyride in search of the perfect beach. If this sounds like an old-fashioned ...
The director Alfonso Cuarón’s 2011 film, set in his homeland of Mexico, is a stripped-down road movie: two teen-age friends, one rich (Diego Luna) and one poor (Gael García Bernal), borrow a car and ...