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Amar Te Duele

Amar Te Duele

Product Type: DVD

Product Price: $9.98

Manufacturer: Lions Gate

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Description

Teenagers Renata (Martha Higareda) and Ulises (Luis Fernando Pena) search for love and freedom amidst class divides, prejudice, peer pressure and urban violence in this moving Romeo and Juliet story set in the shopping malls, working class barrios and wealthy neighborhoods of Mexico City.

Reviews

Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-06-24
Summary: "Excellent movie"

Good movie; for those who don't speak english or know little spanish, read something about the movie (except the end of course), so you will know what's going on because they use a lot of slang.


Rating: 2 / 5
Date: 2010-02-25
Summary: "too much "bad" words"

good story, not such a good setting, not such good work with the cameras, and the way they talk is just.. WHAT!!????


Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2010-01-14
Summary: "Surprisingly Accurate Look at Mexican Society"

As moviegoers, we've been beaten over the head with the Romeo and Juliet adaptations. What makes Amar Te Duele stand out is director Fernando Sariñana's decision to emphasize the differences between the socioeconomic strata of Mexico.

The majority of mainstream Mexican movies fail to touch on the rift that can exist between Nacos and Fresas. The closest equivalent in English that you can probably find to "Naco" is "White Trash", a Mexican that is considered by others to be lower-class or unrefined. To the contrary, Fresas are what you might consider the Mexican equivalent of "Preppy" individuals. These expressions are used lightly in movies such as "Y Tu Mama Tambien" to help polarize the lead characters, and show the influence it has on their relationship. Amar Te Duele is a breath of fresh air in that it delves deeper into the Naco/Fresa class differences that exist in Mexico, but rarely make it to American cinema.

While the plot itself isn't incredibly original, the movie is made enjoyable thanks to a warm performance by the very beautiful Martha Higareda. Higareda does a great job, despite this being her film debut, having only previously appeared in a handful of soap operas on Mexican television.

Amar Te Duele is not a top-notch example of Mexican filmmaking, but it is certainly a DVD that you will want to own.


Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2009-09-08
Summary: "Amar te duele"

One of most realistic and yet best love I ever seen, you could campared this film with Romeo & Juliet


Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2008-09-18
Summary: "Mexico is not donkeys and sombreros.... this movie shows you another side."

I saw this movie while staying in Mexico and it is a stunning, eye-opening look into the class differences in Mexico City. Most American (United States) looks into Mexico involve dusty border towns and sombrero-laiden stereotypes. This shows you another side of Mexico: class differences in one of the largest cities on earth. After 6 weeks in Mexico, much of it in Mexico City, I have a new view of life and of the world.

This movie is worth a watch. If you're not fluent in Spanish (I speak it, but I'm not fluent), you will want to use the subtitles, because it's full of slang and cussing in Spanish that would be impossible for a school-educated Spanish-speaker to get a grip of on the first watch.