Reel Critic -- Mary A. Castillo
“Y Tu Mama Tambien” is the kind of movie you don’t want to see with
your mama.
Starting from the first scene, the audience is treated to the explicit
sexual encounters of Tanoch and Julio. Now on-screensex doesn’t make me
squirm uncomfortably -- unless I’m sitting next to my mom.
However, director Alfonso Cuaron uses these scenes to reveal the
insecurities and inadequacies that Tanoch and Julio try to hide behind a
veil of snideness, alcohol and drugs. And that is what makes “Y Tu Mama
Tambien” a fascinating and challenging film.
Julio and Tanoch are buddies who come from vastly different worlds.
Julio’s single mother works in a factory. Tanoch’s father is an
Institutional Revolutionary Party official and his mother a devotee of
spirituality.
They envision a summer of sex, drugs and parties after their
girlfriends leave for Europe. However, boredom sets in until they attend
Tanoch’s cousin’s wedding, where they lay the moves on Luisa, the
beautiful Spanish wife of a weak-willed mama’s boy named Jano. They tell
her about a beach that only they know about, called Boca de Cielo
(Heaven’s Mouth). Upon receiving the results of a medical test and Jano’s
confession of adultery, Luisa agrees to go with the boys to see this
coastal (not to mention fictional) gem. Even though they made up this
fictional beach, neither Tanoch nor Julio are about to turn down a road
trip with a beautiful older woman. After conning Julio’s politically
active sister into letting them take the car, they hit the road.
As they travel from Mexico City to the coast, the three characters are
so caught up in their own world that they’re blind to the daily tragedies
of the poor. “Y Tu Mama Tambien” bravely shows us not only the ugliness
of the characters, but also the ugliness of Mexico. Through silently
eloquent images, we feel the hopelessness of burnt-out cinder buildings
and the vulnerability of the poor.
As a whole, the movie doesn’t bring anything revolutionary to the
road-trip genre. In the end, neither Julio nor Tanoch are awakened to
social injustice. Maribel Verdu as Luisa is the soul of the story. She is
their conscience -- the one who strips away their adolescent bravado and
the one who ultimately shows them that their friendship is based on false
self-imagery.
“Y Tu Mama Tambien” has not been rated but does contain explicit
sexual encounters.
* MARY A. CASTILLO, 28, is a Costa Mesa resident.
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