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Once Upon a Time in Mexico

joshg October 2, 2003
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Read Time:2 Minute, 3 Second

In Once Upon a Time in Mexico, El Mariachi (Antonio

Banderas), the protagonist, jumps from a moving motorcycle into a pink convertible and

races away. A lesser film would be destroyed by such hokey acts of action absurdity, but

this is the world according to Robert Rodriguez. Rodriguez, renegade writer, maverick

director, and self-proclaimed “rebel without a crew,” makes such ridiculously implausible

scenarios appear cooler than cool.



The film is a

hyper-accelerated-ultra-violent-western-folktale that acts as a kind of

eye-candy-laden-live-action-cartoon, as vivid and colorful as the culture that serves as

its context. The plot centers on the continuing adventures of El Mariachi, the “Legendary

Guitar Gunslinger” from Desperado, a

vengeance-seeking-poetically-brooding-bad-ass-archetypal-cowboy cross between Pancho

Villa and Mad Max,

armed with an arsenal of fully automatic guitars. Here, El is hired by Sands (Johnny

Depp), a quirky, psychopathic, caricature of a CIA agent who represents U.S. influence

over the country. His job is to take down a corrupt general who, in turn, is in bed with

Barillo (William Dafoe), a ruthless drug dealer, who happens to be engaged in a coup to

overthrow the presidency (and the green grass grows all around, all

around).



This cartoon quality builds as a Day of the Dead parade sets the

stage for the coup — igniting a confrontation between the corrupt soldiers and a

resistance of militant Bobbles with oversized papier-mâché heads. Meanwhile, main players

rush around tying up all the story’s loose ends. In these elaborately choreographed

shoot-outs, guns defy the laws of physics; most victims are catapulted through the air,

rendering gravity irrelevant, while main characters are struck with gravity-enhancing

bullets that drag them to the ground in melodramatic stop motion displays. Regardless,

the result is a cross-genre storytelling masterpiece.



The evolution of the

“El” mythos is also the evolution of the filmmaker. El Mariachi, a $7,000 flick

that put the indie back in the oft-overused term “independent,” placed Rodriguez on the

map. The sequel, Desperado, turned Rodriguez into a Hollywood player and his

character into a bona fide action super hero, complete with the requisite vendetta and a

knack for concealing heavy artillery. This final installment with slick styling maneuvers

reminiscent of Hong Kong action guru John Woo has been refined to an elaborate, stylishly

savvy, and surrealistically sophisticated film that shows Rodriguez, like his hero, has

become cooler than cool.

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joshg

jgryn5@hotmail.com
http://heartlander.stormpages.com
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