Drama/Mex Reviews
Drama/Mex has flashy style but puppetlike characters and unconvincing stories.
| Original Score: 2/5 | Aug 16, 2007
This relentlessly downbeat portrait of numerous troubled characters is ultimately too derivative and familiar for it to connect with art house audiences despite some effective moments and good performances by its mainly youthful cast.
Full Review | Jul 17, 2007
Drama/Mex has an overheated plot, but it plays out at a low boil, mainly because Naranjo is more interested in the subtle stresses of human interaction than in shrill desperation.
| Original Score: B | Jul 13, 2007
Visually arresting but thematically uneven, Gerardo Naranjo's fictional snapshot of a gritty Mexican beach is simply too desperate to shock us.
| Original Score: 2.5/4 | Jul 13, 2007
Drama/Mex can't see past its nihilistic little nose.
Full Review | Original Score: 2/4 | Jul 12, 2007
There may be nothing moral or especially original about this movie, but it's got life in it.
| Jul 11, 2007
Drama/Mexmeans to say something about its country of origin, though it's hard to know exactly what.
Full Review | Original Score: 2/5 | Jul 11, 2007
You want to hate his characters? Go ahead. You want to feel sympathy for them? That's OK too. In either case, you'll be shaken by Drama/Mex.
| Original Score: 3/4 | Jul 11, 2007
Amores Perros is a yappy whelp compared to this striking degrees-of-separation drama.
Full Review | Jul 10, 2007
At its heart, Drama/Mex is a story of people struggling to fulfill their roles, and the camera's forceful gaze is their confessional box.
| Original Score: 3.5/4 | Jun 28, 2007
An unerring compositional eye plus firm control of an inventive structure keep Drama/Mex well within the attention span, even when the script wanders without seeming to know why.
| May 25, 2006