Thursday, October 7, 2010

Daniel & Ana (MEXICAN) DVD



DVD Review by Kam Williams

Headline: DVD Exposes Another Reason to Avoid Mexico

I don’t know anybody who’s considering Mexico as a vacation destination anymore, given the shooting of jet skiers, the kidnappings of the rich for ransom, the mass murders in resort areas like Acapulco, the ever-escalating body count in the drug wars and the terrorist bombings. If you’re still thinking of venturing South of the Border in spite of all of the above, you might want to check out this cautionary tale blowing the covers off yet another problem plaguing the troubled region.

Directed by Michel Franco, Daniel & Ana opens with a warning which reads, “Based on real events. The movie tells the story exactly as it happened. Only the names were changed.” We are next introduced to Daniel (Dario Yazbek Bernal) and Ana Torres (Marimar Vega), a brother and sister lucky enough to be raised in the lap of luxury. Best of friends, he’s a high school student and looks up to his big sis who commutes daily to a nearby college campus.

At 16, Daniel is experiencing his first pangs of sexual awakening, while Ana is engaged to a guy who would like to relocate to Spain. But the blushing bride-to-be will hear none of it, insisting that they’ll remain in Mexico City to be near her tight-knit family.

The Torres’ idyllic existence is irreversibly altered the day they’re abducted and tossed into the trunk of their own car by pornographers with a kinky agenda. Apparently, there is a big black market for incest flicks in Mexico, and these sickos put guns to the pair’s heads not for money, but to force them to engage in intercourse with each other on camera.

The bulk of the picture is devoted to the fallout following the unspeakable violation, starting with traumatized Daniel and Ana’s inability to look each other in the eye anymore. And not only do they fail to report the crime, but they can’t bring themselves to discuss it with their parents, a shrink or even each other. Instead their every relationship is ruined by a humiliation which might at any moment further shame them by resurfacing on the internet in graphic detail.

The cinematic equivalent of a PSA shedding light on an underreported vacation risk the Mexican Board of Tourism will never mention in its solicitous TV commercials.

Very Good (3 stars)
Unrated
In Spanish with subtitles.
Running time: 90 Minutes
Studio: Strand Releasing
DVD Extras: Original theatrical trailer and other Strand Releasing trailers.

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