HIST:3502:0001 History of Mexico: Films for Class
Films for Response Paper
Coco
Call Number: Media Collection Video record 45473 DVDPublication Date: 2018A boy named Miguel dreams of becoming a famous guitar player, despite the misgivings of his close-knit family. When his lofty ambitions cause him to run afoul of a curse, he must journey into the Land of the Dead to seek forgiveness from his ancestors.Amores Perros
Call Number: Media Collection Video record 48508 DVDPublication Date: 2000Set in Mexico, this Best Foreign Language nominee offers a trio of interconnecting stories that deal with love, betrayal and death.Vámonos Con Pancho Villa! [Let's Go with Pancho Villa!],
Call Number: Media Collection Video record 19676 DVDPublication Date: 1936This classic of Mexican cinema follows the adventures of six young men who leave their rural homes to join Pancho Villa's army. Together the men endure hardship, tragedy, and disillusionment for the cause of the Mexican Revolution.Rojo Amanecer
Call Number: Media Collection Video record 24715 DVDPublication Date: 1985The film chronicles the notorious massacre by government soldiers of citizens including women and children during a student demonstration against the government at Tlatelolco Plaza, Mexico City on Oct. 2 1968.La Ley de Herodes
Call Number: Media Collection Video record 17733 DVDPublication Date: 1999When in San Pedro de los Saguaros, the mayor is lynched by a group of indigenous people, the old junkyard operator Juan Vargas is named the Temporary Municipal President. This makes him believe that his dream of power is going to come true; but when confronted with the problems of the place, he decides to resign. However, his boss obliges him to stay by telling him that he's been touched by Herodes Law and gives to him the constitution as an aid and a gun. He soon discovers the delights of power applying the law along the way and provoking reactions that get out of control.Roma
Call Number: Media Collection Video record 47622 DVDPublication Date: 2018With his eighth and most personal film, Alfonso Cuaron recreated the early 1970s Mexico City of his childhood, narrating a tumultuous period in the life of a middle-class family through the experiences of Cleo, the indigenous domestic worker who keeps the household running. Charged with the care of four small children abandoned by their father, Cleo tends to the family even as her own life is shaken by personal and political upheavals.
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Database of Interest
- Classic Mexican Cinema This link opens in a new windowMexican Cinema, from its beginnings in the late 1890s to its “Golden Age” (1930s to 1960), was consistently the largest and most important of all the Spanish-speaking countries. During its heyday, the Mexican film industry produced an average of one hundred films annually and supplied screen entertainment to both domestic audiences and international markets in Latin America, the United States, and Europe. The Golden Age of Mexican Cinema is illuminated in this collection of popular movie periodicals.
Note: This database does not contain streaming video