Director: Alejandro González Iñárritu
Country of origin: Mexico
Year of release: 2000
Running time: 158'
Language: Spanish, with English subtitles
The debut feature by director Alejandro González Iñárritu, Amores Perros features three linked stories based in and around Mexico City. The first tells of Octavio, a young barrio-dweller who is in love with his sister-in-law, Susana. Determined to win her away from his brother Ramiro, a thief, Octavio resorts to using his dog Cifo in dogfighting circles to raise enough money for him and Susana to run away together.
The second story concerns Daniel, an editor who abandons his wife and two children for a supermodel, Valeria. When Valeria is involved in a car crash (the other car is driven by Octavio) and becomes handicapped, Daniel is forced to take care of her. Then Valeria’s beloved dog Richie becomes lost under the floorboards of her and Daniel's new apartment. The relationship strains the longer the pitiful dog's whines are heard without his rescue.
Finally comes the story of El Chivo, a bitter ex-guerilla turned hit man, who is given a contract to kill a wealthy, powerful businessman. A witness to the fateful car crash, El Chivo rescues Octavio’s dog, Cifo, whom paramedics have placed on the street—and who will teach the dehumanised El Chivo a shattering lesson.
Considered the film that launched the recent new wave of Mexican cinema, Amores Perros is marked by interconnected plots, dizzily fast pacing and gritty realism. In its structure and style (if not necessarily its content) it anticipates a number of films from the past few years, including Crash, City of God, and even Slumdog Millionaire.
Saturday, August 15, 2009
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