Y
tu Mama Tambien (2001)
Not Rated
Starring: Maribel Verdu, Gale Garcia Bernal
and Diego Luna
Rating:

out
of

|
Y
tu Mama Tambien (Spanish
for "And Your Mother, Too")
tells the story of two teenage boys -- one rich, one middle class -- and
their adventure
with an older woman. It involves sex, nudity and explicit dialogue. Had it
been made in Hollywood -- with a typical Hollywood script -- its target audience
would be 18-24 year old males and it would be critically panned almost unanimously.
But because it is a Mexican film, with an intelligent script, and a serious
disregard for the MPAA and the inherent limitations involved with getting
distribution with an NC17 rating, Y tu Mama Tambien can tell its story without
distorting the story into an immature giggle fest.
Tenoch (Gale Garcia Bernal) and Julio (Diego Luna), fresh from watching
their girlfriends depart to Italy for the summer, meet Luisa (Maribel Verdu),
a very attractive older woman, at a relative's wedding. When Luisa says
she likes the beach, the two boys construct an elaborate story about their
forthcoming trip to Boca del Cielo (Heaven's Mouth), a secluded beach that
doesn't really exist. They invite Luisa to join them, but she politely
declines. A few days later, after Luisa discovers her husband is sleeping
with another woman, she calls the boys to take them up on their offer.
Tenoch and Julio scramble to arrange the trip to a destination that does
not exist. Along the way, Luisa, Julio and Tenoch discuss life, friends
and, most importantly, sex. While the boys may be plotting ways to have
sex with Luisa, she has a few plans of her own for the boys.
Taken at face value, Y tu Mama Tambien might sound like
it should be promoted as something "from the makers of Porky's
II," but
that's not the case at all. Director and co-writer Alfonso Cuaron has
injected more
subtlety, intelligence and wit into this film than any recent (or not
so recent) American teenage sex film has ever possessed. Ever expect
to come
out of American Pie pondering life? I didn't think so. You will definitely
mull over Y tu Mama Tambien for awhile after exiting the theater. By
making and releasing the film outside the mainstream American market,
Cuaron is
able to make a mature film that doesn't have to shy away from showing
how teenage boys actually talk and act.
All of this does not, however, make Y
tu Mama Tambien a great film. It's
a good movie, no doubt about it, but I think that many critics and art-house
movie goers have heaped praise on it because it's nothing like the adolescent
sexual tripe that Hollywood has churned out since the late 1970s. Still,
it has problems. While the dialogue is excellent, the story doesn't quite
stay focused. The comments regarding the divisions between the poor and
the rich in Mexico and Mexican politics (politics in general, actually)
are ill-advised and seem out of place within the frame work of an otherwise
entertaining film.
Don't see Y tu Mama Tambien expecting a life-changing experience. Do,
however, see it with an open mind and with the intention of being entertained
by its unique viewpoints on life and sex. You won't be disappointed.
Trivia: Y
tu Mama Tambien broke Mexican box office records on June 8th, 2001,
grossing $2.2 million in its first week, the biggest opening ever for
a Mexican
film. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |