this film changed my life
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emames — 19 years ago(March 22, 2007 08:36 PM)
Agreed, agreed, agreed. I got y tu mama yesterday from netflix, blew off my homework to watch it and sat speechless and crying after it was finished. i have never been so affected by a movie. i was thinking about it all day today and watched it again immediately after i got home from school. it has instantly become one of my favorite movies, something that's only happened to me a few times. i'm just afraid that i'll never be able to enjoy another movie as much after i fell in love with this one.
"Did you just call me Coltrane?" -
brucedgo — 18 years ago(April 26, 2007 08:31 AM)
Yes, the movie is indeed wonderful. I watched it two times in the first three days after I recorded it from cable. And I could watch it again.
Another movie that I just saw that reveals a revealing glimpse into the meaning of life and freedom is Ikiru. It is also a foreign film, in this case Japanese, directed by Kurosawa. And instead of a view from youth, it is a view from maturity, from one who is dying. In spite of that it's neither sad nor maudlin in any way. In fact I'd say that Y tu mam tambin ends on a sadder note than Ikiru.
It is a more complex and subtle film which might be either more or less enjoyable depending on your tastes and how you feel at the time. And of course it is an older film, from 1952 post-war Japan. -
SevenKal-ElGuiry — 18 years ago(May 11, 2007 04:08 PM)
I agree with the OP, it took me back after i finished watching it, i thought wow, what a cool movie, the camera work, how the woman taught the men what love REALLY was about . everything. i own the doom generation, that move was also very cool, but didnt move me like this movie moved me. truly a rare movie.
I KNOW 2 things that are clear.I'm a great sinner,Christ is a great Savior. -
fschuster — 18 years ago(May 18, 2007 09:16 PM)
Yeah I'll be the first to admit that sometimes with films, most people get really abstract and snobby with their critique of what should be considered artistically outstanding instead of sticking to emotional and psychological stirring aspects in the audience and the movie experience in itself
I happen to think that a lot of directors who ARE considered great auteurs and innovators of cinema do create this very emotional impact, like touching on what it truly means to be human, simply to be alive, and that's why there's such a sometimes even unexplained attraction towards this filmmakers, Cuaron certainly is one, as are his friends Gonzales Inarritu and Guille Del Toro, Kubrick comes to mind as well, especially with Strangelove and 2001, Full Metal Jacket too Linklater is another for me, Fellini, Werner Herzog, Woody Allen, Charlie Kaufman scripts
There's many others, I personally decided to become a filmmaker after watching Baraka a couple of years ago, and movies like that, and this one just absolutely capturre something that we often don't know how to explain critically but it is a huge essential part to making real art that makes a true impact on the audience, and thus, in the world -
Dan03 — 18 years ago(May 21, 2007 02:55 AM)
Agree completely! Maybe saying that th movie "changed my life" is a bit much for me, but I found myself just amazed by what I was looking at. Everything just seems to flow so naturally from the diaglogue and acting to the camera movement and lighting. I also find myself agreeing wth someone else on the board who says that they just sit in silence for 20 minutes after the movie ends trying to figure out what they're feeling. I've had so many friends who I've lent this movie to say something similar, about not knowing exactly how to feel.
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myfriendogri — 18 years ago(June 09, 2007 02:53 AM)
You said that the film changed the way you feel about things.. Has it changed the way that you do things?
The ending, or rather Luisa's ending, for me was "Whaaaaat, oh come on!" .
I've never yet heard of someone with cancer, a month before they die , having the amount of energy she had, road adventure, vigourous sex with two teenagers, and certainly not look look as fit as she did..?
Ambushed by armed bandits, throws herself under the wheels of a 72 ton articulated truck, slips and falls into a vat of boiling oil Yes indeed, but cancer?
So any way. Have your changed feelings transalted into how you do things in life? -
Krustallos — 18 years ago(July 09, 2007 06:19 AM)
I've never yet heard of someone with cancer, a month before they die , having the amount of energy she had
While this is true, it's sort of missing the point really. The full emotional resonance of the story requires that she know she is dying; if you go back and watch the film again the full meaning of various of Luisa's scenes becomes clear. To have her die in an accident, or even suicide, would have wrecked her whole character arc.
In fiction you have to agree with the author to take some things on trust, and implausible illnesses are one of them.
If you're young and you've never seen "Jules et Jim", "Les Valseuses" or "Harold and Maude" this movie could very well be life changing I think. Let's not be so jaded and cynical here.
I used to want to change the world. Now I just want to leave the room with a little dignity. -
bluehairedbeing — 18 years ago(June 12, 2007 05:09 PM)
How it can't make the Top 250 astounds me, but pleases me considering some of the garbage that is on there.
And it had that kind of stun-gun effect on me as well. I seriously wasn't expecting it to be what it was. When I brought it, all I really knew was Gael Garcia Bernal/Road trip/Threesome.. ahaha.. I wasn't banking on something which is very moving, inteligent, inspiring and ultimately heartbreaking. Earlier today I was trying to sum this film up, and I can't find the words. It's truly a masterpiece, but not classifiable. As you watch, it feels so irreverent. And then it ends, and you really feel as though you've experienced something. But then I guess that's what Cuaron was going for because in a loose sense, it mirrors the experience of these characters who's lives, and who's adventure, passes by with no sudden developments, and then bam!
Put very simply, this film is amazing and like the original poster, I've also seen many films which recieve more acclaim than this one; films I've enjoyed, but that have not
really
resonated. Y tu mam tambin effortlessly adresses political and personal issues in a way you rarely see in modern cinema.
I don't know if Y tu mam tambin is the best film I've ever seen, but it's without a doubt the most affecting. -
Johnny_Lovegood — 18 years ago(July 13, 2007 10:06 PM)
I agree with durg1, what is the "work of art" you see in this film? I spent a good $4 renting this peice of crap that had sooooo much hype and for what? A movie about two guys that stop being friends just because they found out they were gay?
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Krustallos — 18 years ago(July 20, 2007 08:49 AM)
A movie about two guys that stop being friends just because they found out they were gay?
Yeah, well, "Citizen Kane" is just a movie about a guy with an overly close attachment to his sledge.
I used to want to change the world. Now I just want to leave the room with a little dignity. -
grungeisdead999 — 18 years ago(July 21, 2007 10:35 PM)
i think its hilarious when people dont like a movie they sum it up into a sentence and therefore that makes it a bad movie.
"A movie about two guys that stop being friends just because they found out they were gay?"
oh wait i forgot every single movie ever made is stamped with a tagline or logline.
whats your favorite movie?
ill sum it up in one line and of course it'll seem terrible -
y-vilaro — 18 years ago(July 24, 2007 09:55 AM)
i don't get why people fixate on that kiss between the guys and sooo many people instantly bring out the gay theme wtf?? what is it with you people why classify that moment of just a thing that happened 'in the moment', that experience that could have been a real thing was beautifully captured on film and it has nothing to do with gayness..
and the thing is yes Luisa was sick and thats what makes you appreciate her love for life even more when you realize she was sick all that time and how she was acting.. it resonates because of what it is.. not all sick people go 'oh im sick my life's over' and lock themselves up in their room they want to make the most of life of the time they have left and how they showed that was amazing.. but the thing that got me the most was that they don't speak again and people assume it was because of the kiss or some gay thing and it IS NOT that.. the kiss might have been like.. the icing on the cake or whatever but it is just a very real representation of when people drift apart when relationships just fall apart and sometimes you cannot return there's nothing you can do about it after all they went through together .. and all they said to each other all their confessions and the luisa thing.. it crossed an invisible line.. it crosses some sort of threshold and then its awkward.. you cant relate in the same way anymore. thats happenned to me in that exact same way.. people just change or something in the relationship changes and you just dont 'click' the same anymore.. especially if life takes you in different directions -
Frengers — 18 years ago(August 02, 2007 11:40 AM)
I can see why someone would say
Y tu mam tambin
is the sort of film that would change their life. I recognized huge chunks of myself and my own experiences in this film too. It taps into these universal feelings but at the same time it feels intimately, intensely personal. Also it's just a great film in general. Very funny, very sad and incredibly natural throughout.
