Tag Archive: Kate del Castillo

GIVEAWAY! Advance Screening Passes for El Chicano

*Contest Closed. Thank you for participating, stay tuned for our next GIVEAWAY!

Giveaway! In 10 CITIES, we have advance screenings of El Chicano for Wednesday, May 1!

*Download a FIRST-COME, FIRST-SERVED screening pass by clicking on the link to your city BELOW. Screening will take place on Wednesday, May 1 (Have your pass ready to show at the door).

Follow the instructions in your pass and share your excitement using #ElChicanoFilm and #SeFijaOnline. ENJOY!

(*Each Pass is good for 2 seats)

DALLAS
El Chicano – Dallas Screening Pass

EL PASO
El Chicano – El Paso Screening Pass

HOUSTON
El Chicano – Houston Screening Pass

MCALLEN
El Chicano – McAllen Screening Pass

PHOENIX
El Chicano – Phoenix Screening Pass

SAN ANTONIO
El Chicano – San Antonio Screening Pass

NEW YORK
El Chicano – New York Screening Pass

LOS ANGELES
El Chicano – Los Angeles Screening Pass

SAN DIEGO
El Chicano – San Diego Screening Pass

SAN FRANCISCO
El Chicano – San Francisco Screening Pass

El Chicano, in theaters May 3.

MYTH. LEGEND. HERO. El Chicano In Theaters May 3

When L.A.P.D. Detective Diego Hernandez is assigned a career-making case investigating a vicious cartel, he uncovers links to his brother’s supposed suicide and a turf battle that’s about to swallow his neighborhood. Torn between playing by the book and seeking justice, he resurrects the masked street legend El Chicano.

Starring Raúl Castillo, Aimee Garcia, Jose Pablo Cantillo, David Castañeda, Marco Rodríguez, Sal Lopez, Marlene Forte, Kate del Castillo, George Lopez, and directed by Ben Hernandez Bray.

Check out El Chicano official trailer. In Theaters May 3.

USA’s Queen Of The South Coming Soon

Queen of the South

Queen of the South

La Reina del Sur with Kate del Castillo was a huge hit on Telemundo a few years back and now we have Queen of the South, a new series on the USA Network. And our friend Dave Rodriguez has directed two episodes.

Director Dave Rodriguez

Director Dave Rodriguez

Based on the best-selling book La Reina Del Sur by Arturo Pérez-Reverte, Queen of the South tells the powerful story of Teresa Mendoza (Alice Braga). When her drug-dealing boyfriend is unexpectedly murdered in Mexico, Teresa is forced to go on the run and seek refuge in America, where she teams with an unlikely figure from her past to bring down the leader of the very drug trafficking ring that has her on the run. In the process, she learns the tools of the trade and strategically positions herself to become the leader of the Cartel.

Also starring Hemky Madera, Justina Machado, Rafael Amaya, Veronica Falcón, and Annabelle Jones.

Queen of the South series is 13-episode and a premiere date has not yet been set.

The 33: An Independent Uphill Battle, Well-Executed

The 33 posterThe world is familiar with the miraculous survival of the 33 miners who were trapped in a Chilean mine for 69 days, five years ago. All of them were carried to safety in a tiny capsule called The Phoenix. Now their real-life story has been told by independent filmmaker Patricia Riggen in her new film, The 33.

The Mexican-born Riggen (Girl in Progress, Under the Same Moon/La Misma Luna) talked about the difficulties of making the film. “Nobody wanted to make this movie, because it’s a drama about 33 Latino men, and that doesn’t get made often.”

The skepticism continued as she made the film in Chile and Colombia, under difficult circumstances. “They were shocked every single day. You know, they couldn’t believe I did this. They saw the [mine] collapse sequence and it’s like, ‘How did you do this? You’re a woman.’ And I have to tell you; it wasn’t about making an action movie, but really being able to portray the heart of these guys and what they went through emotionally. That’s what I brought to the movie, besides the big action sequences. It took, you know, real effort. And we ended up shooting 35 days, six days a week, 14 hours every day in the mine.”

Director Patricia Riggen setting up a scene in a mine

Director Patricia Riggen setting up a scene in a mine

Riggen joked and at times was serious about how working and dealing with so much testosterone was a challenge.

The intense, action-packed drama was filmed in two Colombian mines that weren’t as deep and as dangerous as the Chilean mines. “Every single moment, we had the head of the mine with us.” She said. At times they would have to stop shooting so they could come in and remove a hanging rock. “It would fall, they would clean it up, and then we would continue shooting.” The above-ground scenes were shot in the Chilean desert.

Riggen met with each of the real miners individually, to get each of their stories. We see about 95% of those stories in the film. Riggen also included the real Chilean miners in the film’s closing sequence. She brought them all together on a Sunday to eat and celebrate each other.

L-r: Kate del Castillo, Angela Ortíz and Patricia Riggen Photo: Urania C. Lippmann

L-r: Kate del Castillo, Angela Ortíz and Patricia Riggen
Photo: Urania C. Lippmann

“They are not doing well. They have PTSD; the mine owners didn’t compensate them—they got nothing. We’re all working really hard to be able to give them something back. They deserve it.”

The film has an international cast that has a large Latino presence in front and behind the camera. The film stars Antonio Banderas, Rodrigo Santoro, Juliette Binoche, Mario Casas, Adriana Barraza, Kate del Castillo, Cote de Pablo, James Brolin, Lou Diamond Phillips, Bob Gunton, Gabriel Byrne, Jacob Vargas, Jorge Diaz, Oscar Nuñez and many more. José Rivera wrote the story, which is based on the book, Deep Down Dark by Héctor Tobar.

There was even a little family included with Riggen’s husband, cinematographer Checco Varese as director of photography.

Watch our interview with the director and actress Kate del Castillo (Under the Same Moon/La Misma Luna, La Reina del Sur) who plays Katty, the wife of Antonio Banderas character, Mario. The film is in theaters now. — A.O.

Director Patricia Riggen and The 33

The 33A few weeks back I had a little chat with the director of The 33, Patricia Riggen. This film has been in the works for a while and will be released this fall.

Angela Ortíz and Patricia Riggen

Angela Ortíz and Patricia Riggen

Riggen, director of Girl in Progress and Under the Same Moon (La Misma Luna) took on the job of bringing the amazing true story of the 33 Chilean miners who were trapped half a mile below ground for almost 70 days.Audio-Button-200

We’ve written about Riggen before—you can check out one of our past post here, listen in on our conversation and watch the trailer below.

the-33-int-poster2The film stars Antonio Banderas, Rodrigo Santoro, Juliette Binoche, Mario Casas, Adriana Barraza, Kate del Castillo, Cote de Pablo, James Brolin, Lou Diamond Phillips, Bob Gunton, Gabriel Byrne, Jacob Vargas, Jorge Diaz, Oscar Nuñez and many more.

José Rivera wrote the story, which is based on the book, Deep Down Dark by Héctor Tobar.

The 33 will have its Latin American release in August and on November 13 in the U.S.A. . — A.O.

Hola Mexico Film Festival is In Swing

HOLA MEXICO FILM FESTIVALThe 2015 Hola Mexico Film Festival opened on Friday, May 8 at downtown Los Angeles Regal Cinemas at LA Live. The film for the evening was Gloria, based on the true-life story of rock singer Gloria Trevi.

The festival runs until May 17. Checkout their website here for more info and some of the red carpet photos below. Plus, a video taste of Mariachi Los Camperos de Nati Cano at the opening after party at Don Chente Bar and Grill.

El Americano: The Movie Coming this Summer!

El Americano The Movie - POSTEREl Americano is about a Mexican parrot named Cuco who sets off on an adventure. A new family film coming your way this summer with a slew of recognizable voices; Rico Rodriguez, Cheech Marin, Kate del Castillo, Lisa Kudrow, Gabriel Iglesias, Paul Rodriguez, Erik Estrada, Ricardo “El Mandril” Sanchez, Don Cheto, Argelia Atilano, and Edward James Olmos. Directed by Ricardo Arnaiz and Mike Kunkel.

El Americano: The Movie in theaters this August.

A Personal Look at “The Book of Life”

the-book-of-life-poster200By Juan Escobedo

The Book of Life was visually exciting frame by frame. At first I was confused because of the blurred images, then I looked at the kid next to me with his glasses on and realized it was a 3D movie. Yes, it was my first 3D movie. I couldn’t have asked for a better film to lose my 3D virginity.

Directed by Jorge R Gutierrez, the animated flick was about young love; the after life; animal rights; and a history lesson that will make you want to re-connect with your Mexican roots even if you are not Mexican.

the-book-of-life300

My invitation came across via Lalo Alcaraz, cartoonist for the LA Times and Border Town. After knowing him for the past six years and hearing about his family, he finally introduced me to them at the screening of The Book of Life. The film is a family film with lessons to learn and a chance to open a dialogue to teach your kids about Mexican folklore and culture.

This is a film that seamlessly crosses all races with a cast that include Diego Luna, Zoë Saldaña, Channing Tatum, Ice Cube, Kate del Castillo, Christina Applegate, Ron Perlman, Cheech Marin and so many more. And Guillermo del Toro is one of the film producers.

An animated film that will be an annual must watch during the Halloween and Día de los Muertos season.

Juan Escobedo is a filmmaker and founder of TELA-SOFA

“Killer Women” Arrives on ABC

L-r: Marc Blucas, Alex Fernandez, Tricia Helfer,
Michael Trucco, and Marta Milans

Alex Fernandez and Maria Milans are in front of the camera and Sofía Vergara is (sort of) in the exec office, but is Killer Women a Latino show? Not really.

ABC is pushing Sofía Vergara’s connection to Killer Women pretty hard (as you can see in the promo below), and the promo itself as a kind of Tex-Mex/Robert Rodriguez feel to it. But you take a slightly closer look, and the premise, casting, and locale don’t quite shout out “Latino.”

First Vergara’s production company is only one of many with production credit (she and her partner Luis Balaguer are listed as executive producers), but it’s not clear how much, or little, hands-on involvement she’s had in the production. Additionally, much of the publicity makes a fairly big deal about the new series’ south-of-the-border roots. It’s true, the series is ‘based’ on Mujeres Asesinas, a TV drama made in and for Argentina. But the American writer Hannah Shakespeare has publicly said that the resemblance ends there. When the name came to Hanna during development season, she met with the executive producers who owned the property, and that was all: she then went off and did her own take on the concept. In fact, she says, she hasn’t even watched the Argentinean show; one article about the ABC actioners said that Shakespeare ‘didn’t want it to cloud her own vision.”

Alex Fernandez

Even the name of the show makes things a little murky. It sounds a bit like an armed-and-dangerous version of Desperate Housewives, but in fact it’s really about an extremely blonde, robustly female Texas Ranger who specialize in murders by women. Another promo for the show says, “Eight weeks…eight killers,” which almost makes it sound like a mini-series. And it’s probably worth noting that there have only been two female Texas Rangers in the history of the service; the character, “Molly Parker,” played with energy and charm by Battlestar Galactica’s Tricia Helfer, would be the third.

There are, in fact, two Latinos in the cast, one of them playing a Latino cop, while the other character’s ethnic roots are unclear. The cop in charge is played by Alex Fernandez; this is his first regular role in a series, and this long-faced and intense actor (think of Miguel Ferrer’s younger, slightly less grumpy brother) plays Molly’s long-suffering but supportive boss Company Commander Luis Zea. Spanish actress Marta Milans, who’s been working in Hollywood for the last couple of years after studying and stage work in New York, is also a regular, playing Molly’s sister-in law. With a character name like “Becca Parker,” it’s hard to know which way they’re going with this role, but that is her married name; it remains to be seen. And a final bit of murkiness: the show is place firmly in Texas, but is actually being shot in Breaking Bad’s old stomping grounds, Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Marta Milans

The Futon Critic tells us “Killer Women takes us inside the dangerous world of the Texas Rangers from a female perspective. Molly is committed to finding the truth and seeing justice served. In a male-dominated world, she is aided by her sixth sense for why women kill—rarely out of hatred, usually for what they love.” With solid pro’s like Helfer, who showed her action skills in Battlestar Galactica and more recently in Burn Notice, and with a partner in Marc Blucas, who spent a year or more fighting beside Buffy Summers in Buffy the Vampire Slayer (san cute goatee and a few character lines), it’s certainly got the pedigree; it’s just not clear how Latino the whole treatment really is, despite the trappings.

Like The Bridge and Breaking Bad before it, the locale and overall flavor of the show may make it a haven for Latino actors as guest stars. The first episode alone features Vic Trevino (in a recurring role), Cynthia Huerta, Jorge J. Jimenez, June Griffin Garcia and Vincent Fuentes, among others; episode 3 includes Luis Bordonada of Bless Me, Ultima, with child actress Danica Medina as his daughter, and it’s just been announced that the remarkable Kate del Castillo will be headlining Episode 8, playing–unfortunately–the beautiful head of a drug cartel.

Here’s the best of the promo’s. It does look pretty hot (and a bit like the late, lamented In Plain Sight, when you think about it). The first episode premieres Tuesday January 7 at 10P.

http://youtu.be/hLdPeUeA2KU

“The Book of Life” Will Sound Wonderfully Latino

Guillermo del Toro and Jorge R. Gutierrez

Director Jorge Gutierrez and producer Guillermo del Toro are bringing together a remarkable cast–plenty of them Latino–to provide the voices for The Book of Life

What will become of young Manolo? He’s torn between following his heart and fulfilling the expectation of his family…but he’s pretty much guaranteed to find his way during the perils and pleasure of adventures on three “fantastical worlds”…and with the help of characters voiced by a wide range of Latino talents.

Jorge R. Gutierrez has designed characters for Mucha Lucha! and produced his own 26-episode series of El Tigre that have a decided Latino flavor; much of that is certain to creep into his first feature length film, schedule for release in late 2014.

And what an array of Latino voices he’s gathered. You’ll hear Zoë Saldaña, Diego Luna, Kate del Castillo, Cheech Marin, Danny Trejo, Hector Elizondo, Ana de la Reguera, Eugenio Derbez, Gabriel Iglesias, radio personality Richard “El Mandril” Sanchez and even opera legend Placido Domingo, as well as Christina Applegate, Channing Tatum, Ron Perlman and others. Even the film’s original score and songs are by two-time Oscar winner Gustavo Santaolalla (Brokeback Mountain), who is currently touring with the popular Argentine band Bajofondo.

We’ll see if we can dig up some character design’s as release date grows closer, but in the meantime, mark your calendars for October 17, 2014. That’s when Fox will release The Book of Life worldwide. And enjoy a promo for Gutierrez’ earlier work, El Tigre: The Adventures of Manny River. It was Nickelodeon’s first original flash animation series, and it rocked:

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