IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,8/10
7598
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Mexiko, 1949. Die Mär von einem Hausmeister, der Bürgermeister einer kleinen verlorenen Stadt in der mexikanischen Wüste wird und allmählich realisiert, wie weit ihn seine neu erworbene Mach... Alles lesenMexiko, 1949. Die Mär von einem Hausmeister, der Bürgermeister einer kleinen verlorenen Stadt in der mexikanischen Wüste wird und allmählich realisiert, wie weit ihn seine neu erworbene Macht und die Korruption bringen können.Mexiko, 1949. Die Mär von einem Hausmeister, der Bürgermeister einer kleinen verlorenen Stadt in der mexikanischen Wüste wird und allmählich realisiert, wie weit ihn seine neu erworbene Macht und die Korruption bringen können.
- Auszeichnungen
- 21 Gewinne & 8 Nominierungen insgesamt
Pedro Armendáriz Jr.
- López
- (as Pedro Armendáriz)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Herodes' Law is great and perfectly accurate parody of the corruption that characterizes most of the Latin America's states (for not saying ALL of them). Brilliantly, director Luis Estrada uses a very poor small town to develop his exaggerate parody about the behavior of Latin-American rulers. I'm sure that for us who were raised in small Latin-American towns, have notice that our governors are just a small sample of how things works in the official grounds.
Good photography, characters perfectly conceived and excellent performances makes Lay Ley de Herodes a very enjoyable, sometimes disgusting, film. Don't miss it 9/10
Good photography, characters perfectly conceived and excellent performances makes Lay Ley de Herodes a very enjoyable, sometimes disgusting, film. Don't miss it 9/10
A great film! Captures the essence of Mexico's political life, with a lot of humor and a great story. It's also a very well made... the story is perfectly constructed, the photography is beautiful and the acting is top of the line, with Demian Alcazar and Pedro Armendariz, Jr. clearly stealing the show. For Mexicans it should be a rather bittersweet experience... you can't help but laugh at the situation, but it's also so real that you can feel a little frustrated with your government. Filmed almost entirely in brown and sepia tones, to make it as close to 'black and white' as possible.
An excellent hidden gem from writer/director Luis Estrada that won over 20 awards.
The Mayor of San Pedro loses his head while trying to abscond with the town's money, so the party puts in a figurehead (Damián , - Crónicas, The Crime of Father Amaro) until the elections.
Soon, he figures out the way of politics and is enjoying the benefits - and they are hot benefits! Soon, he is killing his enemies and extorting money like the rest of them. Of course, he manages to rise through his evil as all politicians do.
Alcázar was outstanding in this political satire, as was Salvador Sánchez, Guillermo Gil, and Isela Vega.
The Mayor of San Pedro loses his head while trying to abscond with the town's money, so the party puts in a figurehead (Damián , - Crónicas, The Crime of Father Amaro) until the elections.
Soon, he figures out the way of politics and is enjoying the benefits - and they are hot benefits! Soon, he is killing his enemies and extorting money like the rest of them. Of course, he manages to rise through his evil as all politicians do.
Alcázar was outstanding in this political satire, as was Salvador Sánchez, Guillermo Gil, and Isela Vega.
I just saw "La Ley de Herodes" last night. I really enjoyed the film. It is a great black comedy. The script by Leñero and Estrada is carefully written. This is the kind of cinema Mexico needs. One of the most amazing things is that they use real names of political parties and that they got away with it.
Great performances by everyone, I think. Marvelous ending! Congratulations to everyone involved in this project!
Great performances by everyone, I think. Marvelous ending! Congratulations to everyone involved in this project!
Satire is very difficult to pull off, but this one is a classic. It works beautifully, it's cleverly crafted, it's devilishly funny. The acting is superb. It was a joy to see Isela Vega again! I can't remember any other Mexican movie being as devastatingly critical of our "perfect dictatorship" as this one. It's really a pretty accurate depiction of the morass that corruption has created in Mexico and of the attitude of the ruling party towards the nation. The impunity, the cynicism, the paternalism, the graft, the slime, the crime, it's no exaggeration. The government is so out of touch and so stupid that they even tried to censor it. Needless to say, the movie has been playing to packed houses in Mexico. I hope it breaks all box office records. Even better, it should be Mexico's entry to the Academy Awards.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis was the first Mexican film that showed the name of the official Party (Partido Revolucionario Institucional, or P.R.I.). In past times, filmmakers had to change the party's name to avoid censorship.
- VerbindungenFollowed by El infierno (2010)
- SoundtracksQue me lleve la tristeza
Written by Marcial Alejandro
Performed by Salvador 'Negro' Ojeda (as Salvador "El Negro" Ojeda)
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- Herod's Law
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Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 52.000 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 6.515 $
- 15. Juni 2003
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 52.000 $
- Laufzeit
- 2 Std. 3 Min.(123 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
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