Y Tu Mamá También
The lives of Julio and Tenoch, like those of seventeen-year old boys everywhere, are ruled by raging hormones, intense friendships, and a headlong rush into adulthood. Over the course of a summer,… The lives of Julio and Tenoch, like those of seventeen-year old boys everywhere, are ruled by raging hormones, intense friendships, and a headlong rush into adulthood. Over the course of a summer, the two best friends, while living out a carefree cross-country escapade with a gorgeous older woman, also find connection with each other, themselves and the world around them. Just days after the boys trade heartfelt good-byes with their sexy, young girlfriends who are headed to Italy for summer vacation, their attention is diverted by Luisa, a stunning twenty-eight year old Spaniard. At a family wedding in Mexico City, the boys awkwardly flirt with Luisa, who is married to a distant cousin of Tenoch’s. Fueled by alcohol and her beauty, the boys invite Luisa to accompany them on a road trip to a remote beach with the romantic name of Boca del Cielo — Heaven’s Mouth — neglecting to mention that they wouldn’t know where to find it, even if it actually did exist. Luisa humours the boys, but not without first fuelling their vivid imaginations. A few days later, Luisa, receives some heartbreaking news and, needing a change of scenery, tracks down the boys and accepts their offer. The unlikely trio hits the road, their destination not so much Boca del Cielo as that seductive and mysterious place where innocence, sexuality, and friendships collide.
As the saying goes, you never really know someone until you travel with him. With the car closing in upon them, Julio and Tenoch are forced to reveal to each other sides of their personalities they had never before even dared to explore. Though best friends for years, the boys realize they had often taken each other for granted, not seeing the person in front of them as more than a façade or an attitude. Luisa is the catalyst of self-discovery. Her presence brings out the best – and the worst – in the two friends. At times a sexy seductress, at other times the maternal figure each of the friends is lacking, Luisa, too, finds out what is important to her. As the road leading to the elusive Boca del Cielo becomes more desolate and inhospitable, the protagonists find there is no escape from a confrontation with their innermost demons and desires.
Sexy, beautiful, hysterical, mesmerizing -- aw fuck it, I don’t want to get into an Thesarus fest. Suffice it to say that Y Tu Mamá También is one of the finest pieces of film I’ve seen in a while. You need to see it, and your Mama too. Just put your hand over her eyes during all the shagging. – eFilmCritic.com
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about 1 year ago
Great movie! It’s on my DVD shelf. I think I need to dust it off and watch it!
about 1 year ago
Quite a movie – I have seen it several times on IFC.
about 1 year ago
I’m glad you liked this movie ‘coz its one of my favotite ones. I’d loke to say that I met Diego Luna at highschool in Mexico City. At that time, he had a bfriend called Enrique (kike as most of us caleed him) who was a trully qt boy ;). Nowadays Diego is married and has a child. I don’t know about Kike… THANX 4 THE GREAT BLOG. I LUV IT!
about 1 year ago
La película es muy bonita pero en este video que publican, pongan al menos la escena de la piscina en la que ellos están desnudos. No me parece nada bien el resumen que hacen.
about 1 month ago
Quite confusing for me the international flavor as a short I have not seen the movie But Y used alone is a Vietnamese word I think Tu also usually I’ve seen it as a Personal Name, Mama is Latin but can be used in Vietnamese slang. Finally as the penultimate ending scene swim in the Ocean is the exact translation of Tam Bien.
If anyone has an explanation please tell this humble dope, me the meaning links?