Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In Y tu mamá también, Alfonso Cuarón reimagined the American road movie genre to depict Mexico's geography, politics, people, and culture. [11] Cuarón wanted to use the road-film genre to challenge mid-20th century Latin-American Cinema movements that rejected the pleasure and entertainment typical of Hollywood commercial cinema created by ...
Post-2001: Y Tu Mamá También and New Maricón Cinema [ edit ] Several of the notable works of Ximena Cuevas , a Mexican performance artiste who incorporates themes of lesbianism into her works and who has been called "a perfect prototype for an emergent Queer New Latin American Cinema", were performed in 2001.
The Prisoner of Azkaban was a continuation of Cuarón's take on the coming-of-age genre after Y, Tu Mama Tambien. [39] That film is in the form of an American road movie, along with teen movie elements. [40] Voice-over narration adds to those genres a documentary feel.
Gael García Bernal [a] (Spanish: [ɡaˈel ɣaɾˈsi.a βeɾˈnal]; born 30 November 1978) is a Mexican actor and filmmaker.He is known for his performances in the films Amores perros (2000), Y tu mamá también (2001), Bad Education (2004), The Motorcycle Diaries (2004), Babel (2006), Coco (2017), Old (2021), and Cassandro (2023).
She made her debut in an international work in Y tu mamá también (2001), [5] portraying Luisa Cortés, an exotic madrileña who ends up accepting a trip offer across rural Mexico from a Mexican cousin-in-law and his friend. [6] In 2002, she starred as the title character in comedy peplum Lisístrata, playing an Athenian woman setting up a sex ...
Y Tu Mamá También: Best Foreign Language Film Won 2004 Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban: Best Family Film Nominated 2013 Gravity: Best Picture Nominated [47] Best Director Won Best Editing Won Best Science Fiction/Horror Film Won 2018 Roma: Best Picture Won Best Director Won Best Original Screenplay Nominated Best Cinematography Won ...
The bisexual-themed Mexican film Y tu mamá también (2001) was nominated for an Oscar, [1] with the Chilean trans+ film A Fantastic Woman (2017) winning one. Azul y no tan rosa (2012) won the Goya Award for Best Spanish Language Foreign Film at the 28th Goya Awards, becoming the first Venezuelan film to do so. [5]
Y tu Mamá También: Alfonso Cuarón: Mexico 2003: Autumn Spring: Vladimír Michálek: Czech Republic The Barbarian Invasions: Denys Arcand: Canada, France Best of Youth: Marco Tullio Giordana: Italy Man on the Train: Patrice Leconte: France Monsieur Ibrahim: François Dupeyron: 2004: Bad Education: Pedro Almodóvar: Spain The Sea Inside ...