Status
Released
original language
es
Budget
$ 5000000
Revenue
$ 33600000
Tenoch Iturbide
Julio Zapata
Luisa Cortés
Narrator (voice)
Silvia Allende de Iturbide
María Eugenia Calles de Huerta
Cecilia Huerta
Miguel Iturbide
Enriqueta 'Queta' Allende
Jesús 'Chuy' Carranza
Ana Morelos
Diego 'Saba' Madero
Manuel Huerta
Nicole Bazaine
Esteban Morelos
Alejandro 'Jano' Montes de Oca
Leodegaria 'Leo' Victoria
Mabel Juárez de Carranza
Lucero Carranza
Christian Carranza
President (uncredited)
Written by kineticandroid on 2014-06-21
While recently watching "Blue Is the Warmest Color," I was reminded of this film, and like "Blue," I was drawn to how the film's central relationship between Tenoch and Julio felt both astoundingly ecstatic and yet isolating, especially when it ends. It's as if the passions from their road trip to Heaven's Mouth burned too brightly to be sustained once they returned to their normal lives. I first looked at this film as a coming-of-age film, albeit one that happened to include sex scenes much more graphic than others of its genre. That opinion helps me find a reflective starting point for this film, but every time I watch it, I think more and more about the socioeconomic points Cuarón interjects throughout. I think more about how little I know about other countries, especially the one just south of my own. (I suppose Tenoch and Julio don't know that much either.) After this last viewing, I thought more about whether the the two actually learned something positive from the experience. We're told they never meet again after the film ends. What happens next? And how does this trip I witnessed mean to that answer?