MÉXICO, HOY: EL INFIERNO. BENJAMÍN GARCÍA, EL BENNY, ES DEPORTADO DE ESTADOS UNIDOS Y AL REGRESAR A SU PUEBLO ENCUENTRA UN PANORAMA DESOLADOR. LA VIOLENCIA, LA CORRUPCIÓN Y LA CRISIS ECONÓMICA QUE AZOTAN AL PAÍS, HAN DEVASTADO POR COMPLETO AL LUGAR. EL BENNY, SIN OTRAS OPCIONES Y PARA AYUDAR A SU FAMILIA A SALIR ADELANTE, SE INVOLUCRA EN EL NEGOCIO DEL NARCO, EN EL QUE TIENE, POR PRIMERA VEZ EN SU VIDA, UNA FULGURANTE PROSPERIDAD LLENA DE DINERO, MUJERES Y VIOLENCIA, PERO AL FINAL DESCUBRIRÁ EN CARNE PROPIA, QUE EL TENTADOR CAMINO DE LA VIDA CRIMINAL NO SIEMPRE PAGA LO QUE PROMETE. ACLAMADA POR EL PÚBLICO Y LA CRÍTICA; Y CONSIDERADA UNA DE LAS MEJORES Y MÁS POLÉMICAS PELÍCULAS DE LA DÉCADA, EL INFIERNO CIERRA LA TRILOGÍA SATÍRICA DE LUÍS ESTRADA, JUNTO CON LA LEY DE HERODES Y UN MUNDO MARAVILLOSO, SOBRE LA VIDA POLÍTICA Y SOCIAL DEL MÉXICO CONTEMPORÁNEO.
J**A
Damn, good movie
Yes, I will buy again
E**O
Moving, Entertaining, Shocking
One of the great films of 2010 is one that more than likely you haven't heard of.. It is in Spanish and its Mexican made and produced with mostly Mexican actors. It won the 2011 Ariel Award in Mexico. Opened to critical acclaim for its dark and bloody yet comedic treatment of the situation in Mexico in 2010. The year of its dual centennial: 100 years since the Second Mexican Revolution and 200 years since the first. Like the graphics say in the trailer: Nada que celebrar. Nothing to celebrate.El Infierno opens with a classic scene that many will relate to. Many have lived this scene. Benny Garcia is receiving a blessing from his mother before he leaves on his journey to El Norte, or Gringolandia as it is called. He promises to send back money He strides up the dusty road from the ranchito with the palm frond porch as his mother and little brother watch sadly. During his absence the little brother will become a famous killer known as "El Diablo".Next scene is 20 years later, and Benny is being deported. He has a little money and has learned a good bit of English during his stay. You can see the mixed emotions on his face as Los Lobos sing Yo soy de raza de oro, Yo soy Mexican Americano. He's somewhat relieved to be going home again. How bad could it be? The answer is very, very badHighway robbery, both official and civilian, assassinations. What should be decent people, now stooping to rob the dead. The stage is set. Now the story unfolds.Beautifully shot and scripted, the comedy and tragedy both take wing. Everyone loses in the end, and in the end the old ways are carried on with a new generation. Bennies brother had become a famous narco and assassin in town. He ended up with 60 bullets from guns of an unknown enemy. Of which there were legion.The regional cartel boss controls with an iron fist the police and political structure of the region. He's kind of a Mexican boss hog from the old Dukes of Hazard Show, except that he is filthy rich from drug money and assorted criminal enterprise, and also will kill at the drop of a hat. He's also overly emotional and hen-pecked. So ridiculous it could well be real life.The film works on many levels. Murder, mayhem, mutilation and a sense of ever present doom would seem to be a poor prescription for comedy. But somehow Director Luis Estrada makes it work. All the elements of Mexican society have been compromised and there is little left to have faith in. "El Benny" as Benjamin Garcia the returning migrant is known, becomes a narco-killer and enforcer, but in the end makes perhaps, a noble gesture in a cathartic massacre of the corrupt power structure of Mexico.The acting is first rate. The parts of "El Benny" and "El Coci Loco" are done to comic perfection. They might have become killers and soldiers in a filthy, depressing war; still the audience retains a connection to their humanity.As far as the drug war that puts billions, perhaps trillions, in the pockets of gangsters and banksters, politicians, police and governments, no solutions are in sight. The corruption works on all levels. El Infierno offers none. As "El Coci says: In Mexico you don't do what you want, only what you can"Note: The release in Mexico of "El Infierno" was somewhat spotty and as far as I know it wasn't released theatrically, but is available on DVD. However there are no English subtitles. If you speak some Spanish you should be able to follow the action.
1**N
Great Movie
Love the characters, acting and plot
A**R
Excellent product
Excellent move
J**Z
Great movie, rented today..
nice and beautiful movie is fantastic..
Y**E
Humor
Long movie very entertaining humor was funny
C**C
Great movie. Una risa que nos da
Muy recomendable. Muy chistosa la película
J**R
Shakespearean Quixotic Mexican Cartel Story
Shakespearean Quixotic Mexican Cartel story at its best. This is one action-packed Cartel life movie, but it has quite a bit of depth to it, some very clever humor, a great story, and impeccable use of the Spanish language with those cultural expressions that only Mexico can create. All of the actors delivered, hard to even say that one was better than another.
G**C
Four Stars
good
G**A
Fantastica pelicula !
Me ha encantado esa pelicula. Una vez mas, el actor Damian Alcazar es muy bueno. Si les ha gustado la otra pelicula La Ley de Herodes, seguro que les va a gustar tambien esta , aunque se trata de otro tema, corrupcion entre narcotraficantes y politicos...La escena final es maravillosamente rodeada. Algunos lados de la pelicula me recuerdan Scarface !
A**D
Region 1 DVD of a very bleak film
This is a region 1 DVD (the product information didn't make this clear) and won't play on a region 2 player. Fortunately I have a multi-region player but I was disappointed by the film (which had been recommended to me by my brother). It paints a very bleak picture of contemporary Mexico and there was simply too much violence for my taste. There are no subtitles so it is only suitable for people with a good understanding of Spanish.
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