Amores Perros , translated as "Love is a Bitch", demonstrates exactly that in this emotional yet action packed drama. The film revolves around the lives of three different individuals who's personal lives are being ruled by love. The unique part about this film is they all involve a dog in their life that influences the story somehow. The movie is actually very captivating as you see the characters and their stories evolve and how they interestingly intersect with the lives of each character.
You have the hope filled young Octavio who is helplessly in love with Susana, the wife of his brother, and starts using his dog Cofi as a fighter to earn money to run away with her. Valeria, the beautiful super model, who is involved with a married man Daniel and gets into an accident with Octavio. Last the El Chivo who is an ex teacher gone guerilla who strives to stay away from his daughter who he left as a little girl, but desperately misses. The part I love about this movie the most is that shows that love is not easy, and the extreme sacrifices that people will make for love. We see Octavio, though very very naïve, gives all of his earning to support a life for a women he will never have, El Chivo who lives a life on the streets to avoid coming back into his daughters life which he abandoned to better the world, and Daniel who leaves his wife and child, willingly, to live a life with Valeria who has to live her life knowing she lost the most important thing to her, her beauty. Though I felt the movie could get slow at time, with the searching of Richie, it makes up for it with is surprising connections between the characters and the ironic results the come of each story.
NIU Intro to Latina/o and Latin American Studies Fall 2013 Blog
Friday, December 13, 2013
The Things We Do For Love (Amores Perros Movie Review)
Friday, December 6, 2013
I cannot live life without a father
I cannot live life without a father
In the film, La Mission, we find out that the son of a former prisoner and current bus driver's son is gay. The son has many conflicts with his father since the discovery his father made through photographs of the son the night before. The photographs were taken at a gay night club where the son Jesse and his romance partner were dancing and kissing. Che the father of Jesse was disgusted by these photos and could not look at him in the same way since the discovery. Jesse is a good student with hopes of going on to college away from la mission. This street is significant because everyone in the community knows each other. This Chicano community is there for each other like family. The consistency of working on low-rider cars is what really brings this community together as well as the bond for family. Within the Latino culture, being gay or lesbian is a major taboo. Many families alienate their children or banish them like Che did after a confrontation. Jesse knowing that his father wouldn't be able to handle the news of his lifestyle, he decided to hide it from him. Jesse like many Latinos are well aware of the behavior that many people have towards the lifestyle that Jesse is living. A lot of kids are hiding not only from their friends but even more from their families to cover up the hurt or the disgrace that many families tell the child he or she had placed upon them. In the Latino community of La Mission, there is a group of bullies or gangsters that disagree with the way Jesse is going about in his sexual life. The same group hassles the father and later on ends up shooting Jesse when he is seen with his romantic partner. The father is then put under pressure to put aside the lifestyle of his son as he is admitted into the hospital for the wounds that were caused by the shooting. Che was only able to do this for a little of time. He soon again tried to forcefully change Jesse's sexual lifestyle when he is out of the hospital. Many parents like Che have applied extreme measures to have their children change their sexual lives in benefit to save the parents face and that of the family. Many parents don't take into account to listen or to give the son or daughter the opportunity to see them again eye to eye like Che. There is a similarity of hegemony when the parents try to govern their children by having them change their lifestyles without giving them the opportunity to explain why. Many children, teens, and adults to this day are no different to Jesse. They struggle to be able to tell their parents they are gay or lesbian. As well as Che, many parents find it difficult to accept their children for their life styles. This may be because of religion, pride, or simply just because they look down upon the life style of the gay community. With in the Latino community there is a lot of machismo from the father and son side. To see or hear something like the son of a very respected man or very masculine, is a terrible and shameful thing. This is the shame that Jesse's father, Che, felt.
The film used is: La Mission, Directed by: Peter Bratt, Date of release: January 19th, 2009
Photograph is of Che and Jesse being held back by friends of the family during an altercation in the movie.
Y Tu Mama Tambien Movie Review
I think this movie, “Y
Tu Mama Tambien,” focus on how different social classes can blend together and
interact without discriminating each other. Julio and Tenoch are best friends even though,
they have different social status. Julio is a middle class young man that lives
in the barrios of Mexico City, in the case of Tenoch, his life is surrounded by luxuries
that his Dad provides to his entire family, and they even have a maid who took
care of Tenoch since he was a little kid.
Tenoch’s father is a
well known politician from the Institutional Revolutionary Party
(PRI), Although, the PRI governed Mexico for more than 70 years, it came to its
own down fault, for all the corruption, and the misunderstandings among them.
The movie starts with
Tenoch, and Julio, having sex with their girlfriends. This scene shows a little
controversy later on in the movie; sexuality plays a huge role in it. When Tenoch and Julio girlfriends’ left, to
Europe, These young men decided to take a road trip to a little beach Boca Del
Cielo which they did not have any idea of where it was located.
Luisa role in the movie
is to be the one suffering and try to complete her goal which is to go see the ocean.
She found Julio and Tenoch attractive so she decided to travel with then to
Boca Del Cielo.
While traveling to Boca
Del Cielo, the movie stops several times to focus at the crosses that they see
at the side of the road, people that have died for protesting or car accidents.
This shows a little bit of what the government has done to its own people. Also,
Tenoch realizes that his Nana hometown was affected by all the disputes between
campesinos, and the police. This shows why Tenoch’s Nana had to migrate to the
capital to get away from all the mistreatments that this people got from the
government. Also, she had to work at low pay job, and work herself up for a
better pay.
When they got to Boca
Del Cielo, the guy driving the boat told them, how this huge hotel chains
wanted to privatize the beach, and how it would affect him, his family, and the
rest of the residents of Boca Del Cielo. Here this part of the movie, shows how
the lower classes are the most affected by the system, in this case the government
that allowed this big Hotel chains to destroy the environment by constructing
tourist buildings that will only cause more pollution to the waters and the
natural resources.
The night the three of
the got really drunk, the three of the started some sexual stuff, and at the
end of it Tenoch and Julio started kissing each other. This shows how insecure
of their sexuality Tenoch and Julio were.
At the end of the
movie, Louisa decided to stay in Boca Del CIelo, Tenoch and Julio went back to
Mexico City. They stop talking for a while. Then they finally see each other
again when the PRI has lost its dictatorship in Mexico. As consequence, Tenoch’s
family had to leave the country, live in Europe for more than a year.
In conclusion, this
movie, “Y Tu Mama Tambien,” shows how corruption, sexuality, and social classes
play a key role within society. Also, how people get affected by it, and the
consequences that they have to face at the end of each move the government
takes.
Thursday, November 21, 2013
America: Land of The Uneducated

Saturday, November 9, 2013
Cruce el Rio Grande Nadando
"Cruce el Rio Grande Nadando"
Within the United States, there were 22.3 million born U.S. natives who self-identified themselves as Hispanics of Mexican origin. This statistic was from a Census Bureau by the Pew Research Center in the year 2012. The United States is covered by far the largest Hispanic origin that account for two-thirds of the population in 2012. Over the years there have been more and more immigrants that come form Mexico and start their families here as well as have earlier generations from Mexico come over with them or send money back for their families to immigrate to the United States. With all of this taking place, there has been talk about how the people prefer to be classified if they should be called Latino, Hispanic, or just Mexican. With the Census Bureau has been has come across this situation and have not taken into consideration of this matter until after the 1930's census. The Census Bureau had classified them as white in the beginning. Many of them would say other but the Census would then change it later on record that they were white. To many people it was a problem. Because Mexicans being born or immigrated to the United States weren't being treated as white people with rights. They were through history treated as second-class citizens as well as legally treated as laborers. With this, it is taken by white Americans that all Mexicans are "illegal" and all "illegals" are Mexican. As law enforcement is pressed upon illegal immigrants it is shown that they go after how they dress or how dark their skin is. And because they cannot really determine how they really are able to classify themselves they are not assumed to be white or therefore not legal to the United States. Throughout the time the country has somewhat evolved. The United States still being young discrimination will still exist. If someone were to have an Indian complexion, that person would still be discriminated against. Despite having people who are at a high status within the United States, many still qualify themselves as "white" in the census or anything else, because they are at times afraid to be discriminated against and or be treated differently. many Latino-Americanos would to this because they wouldn't know that to classify themselves as and because many of them looked or felt "white" they would check that. But to many people the race isn't what is important to them. Its the culture that in retained and if possible the American citizenship. Now there is a new change that is being discussed in the Census Bureau. That the Hispanic question be followed with a nation of origin. This way many people who were previously classifying themselves as Hispanics may actually be able to be more specific of who they really are by where they are from originally. With this change many people will be more content. It will have come from a long way form when people were only allowed to fill in white, then other, and now to finally have his opportunity to fill in the place of origin.
The picture is of Cain Velasquez (middle), a Mexican fighter born in the United States, of Mexican immigrant parents and is currently the heavy weight champion in the UFC.
http://www.pewhispanic.org/2013/05/01/a-demographic-portrait-of-mexican-origin-hispanics-in-the-united-states/
http://www.academia.edu/1553810/Racial_Identity_and_Racial_Treatment_of_Mexican_Americans
http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_18117280
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/01/03/hispanics-may-be-added-to-census-race-category/1808087/
The picture is of Cain Velasquez (middle), a Mexican fighter born in the United States, of Mexican immigrant parents and is currently the heavy weight champion in the UFC.
http://www.pewhispanic.org/2013/05/01/a-demographic-portrait-of-mexican-origin-hispanics-in-the-united-states/
http://www.academia.edu/1553810/Racial_Identity_and_Racial_Treatment_of_Mexican_Americans
http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_18117280
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/01/03/hispanics-may-be-added-to-census-race-category/1808087/
Friday, November 8, 2013
Pick a Color, Any Color
Racial
identity has always played a significant role in determining how a person is
treated. Along mankind’s timeline, there has slowly been a trend to accept
colors of all kinds only in the recent century or so. By no means is this acceptance
or assimilation universal; people today can still be heard using racial slurs.
What happens though in a world where people of multiracial backgrounds slowly
become more prevalent than those who claim only one race? Will there be an
enlightenment of sorts where people no longer make judgments based on skin
tone? Unfortunately our generations will
likely not know this answer, but it is a good idea to look at our surroundings
now and notice the increasing trend of people who wish to be identified as
mixed race.
As a
person who was born to a Mexican father and Irish German mother, I have found
that I am often forced to “pick a race.” From tests to school applications, I
have had to mark either Hispanic or White. This has honestly always confused me.
I was surrounded in a “white” culture at school, so from day one I formed a
white identity. However, as I began to grow older my features and skin tone
began to paint the opposite picture of how I perceived myself. An astonishing number
of people, including President Barack Obama, have begun to embrace their mixed
background. Although some might claim that bringing attention to people of
multiple races hurts civil rights, they fail to look at what struggles these
types of people may face, including choice of identification.
An
interesting study of a mixed population in South Africa describes how even
though there is a large mixed population, there can still be problems avoiding
the notion of white dominance. If those who can vote still only vote for people
of white ancestry, it’s hard to see any real advantage of stemming from two
different races. In an article by Tanya
Golash-Boza called Dropping the Hyphen?
Becoming Latino(a)-American through
Racialized Assimilation there is this notion that a person is never just an
American unless they are white. What happens to a country’s attempt at
unification when the people can’t even all agree on what to call themselves. Although
assimilation, the process of becoming equated with a preexisting way of life,
has three supposed degrees of variance (including straight-line, segmented, and
racialized), there seems to be no way to escape a label of some kind. A mixed
person ultimately has to define themselves and this is counter intuitive as
they have the privilege of two (or more) very distinct worlds.
Treating ones varied cultural backgrounds with respect and the attention each deserves is quite possibly a solution to reservations one might have when claiming identity. As I mentioned earlier, there is a slow but building group of leaders and popular people who have mixed race. This is a sigh of relief for others who struggle or who feel confused when explaining that mom is white and dad is brown. Of course the idea of mixed race is nothing new and neither is the idea of segregated groups of color. What is changing, and for the good I believe, is the study of the mixed children. There is recognition now that people of different colors do have an effect on the arts, in literature, and in theatre. Mixed kids are slowly understanding that they can have pride and be accepted.
Thursday, November 7, 2013
Polar opposites: A Thin Line between Ethnicity and Race...
Are many people stereotypical about Ethnicity and
race? Or is assimilation taken too far in the U.S. many people in Latin
American goes through racial or is questioned ab. In the article “To be or not
to be (Hispanic or Latino): Brazilian racial and ethnic in the United
States. The biggest problem
is racism in Brazilian many people that are from there is Latino but when they
come into the U.S. they are identified as another race or ethnicity. They are
told that they or their ancestors are from the European, second the way they
view Latinos that immigrate to the America and they are being put in a category.
Lastly is the crucial outcome of Latin Americans identity.
Many people that are Latino are put into this
classification system made in the U.S. with what race they are. The problem
with this classification system is that if you have any European ancestry so
people who skin tone or even by generation. The children of two generation have
different experiences living in the U.S. many Brazilians that immigrate to the
U.S. coming as a child. Are more accepted one reason is because they have a
chance to get the right education and being around other racial ethnicity. They
also have better chances learning English. When adults Hispanics or Latinos
migrate they don’t know how to speak English. Secondly the way U.S. view
Hispanics and Latinos they only look at the unimportant about Latin’s in American
and the big impacts. The hard work they do while living in the U.S. the good
work they do but still to be stereotype as bad to the U.S.
Lastly
why it is crucial for immigrants of Hispanic and Latino ethnicity is because in
the U.S. It is a high rate of racism that has to do with who fits in the category
to actually be American and
Who
is closer to being the right color to be American or even with class; higher
and middle. When I was younger growing up I went to school with an elementary
school with mostly black kids and Hispanics they had many programs for students
even speech classes for the students that didn’t speak English clearly. So my
opinion is that the U.S. wants immigrants that was born or was migrated in America
to take on the ways of the American people and make it as much as possible for
other race to be similar as whites. Some Hispanics / Latinos don’t even know
much about the ethnicity they come from.
So
to conclude yes assimilation is taken too far in America. There is too many people
being grouped in categories and this is bad because it’s not a good dream that
people destined for in the article 'Latino Americans,' A
History of Immigration and Assimilation many dreams are damaged by deportation and
separates family if they don’t fit the category or without documentation they
get sent back.
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