NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
20 k
MA NOTE
Richard Montañez qui, en tant que concierge de Frito Lay, a bouleversé l'industrie alimentaire en exploitant son héritage mexicain pour transformer les Flamin' Hot Cheetos.Richard Montañez qui, en tant que concierge de Frito Lay, a bouleversé l'industrie alimentaire en exploitant son héritage mexicain pour transformer les Flamin' Hot Cheetos.Richard Montañez qui, en tant que concierge de Frito Lay, a bouleversé l'industrie alimentaire en exploitant son héritage mexicain pour transformer les Flamin' Hot Cheetos.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nommé pour 1 Oscar
- 7 victoires et 9 nominations au total
Carlos S. Sanchez
- Young Richard
- (as Carlos Sanchez)
Carlos Solórzano
- Young Lucky Montañez
- (as Carlos Solorzano)
Avis à la une
I needed to watch a feel-good, and it does its job as well as could be expected. Unfortunately, what I only discovered afterwards was that although the movie aspires to be a true story of going from being the underdog to the top, the entire thing is a fabrication, as documented by The Los Angeles Times. Montañes has publicly changed important details of the story over his lifetime, and even PepsiCo itself disputes that he had anything to do with Flamin' Hot Cheetos. Most importantly, Enrico was not even with the company at the time this happened, and Montañes was actually promoted to a machinist shortly after starting as a janitor.
Great little flick about one of the worlds most popular snack. Hot Cheetos popped up one day out of nowhere while I was in the 5th grade. They were everywhere and everyone was eating them. Leaving the familiar red stains everywhere unless you used the chop sticks but that was much later? Anyway, Eva Longoria did a great job making the movie flow. Keeping things light and entertaining. She did a great job with balancing the whole story with knowing when the scene had to be serious and when it could take those liberties to have some fun. Cast played well off of each other. Jesse García and Annie Gonzales were great together. Fun to see Tony Shalhoub, Dennis Haysbert, Matt Walsh, and Peter Diseth in this. Movie clocks in at 98 minutes but it really felt like not a single second was wasted. I did enjoy this flick with my very own bag of hot Cheetos cos why not? Good flick!
This film was heartwarming, entertaining and with actual laugh out loud moments - truth to the story or not. One can argue that a huge corporation like Pepsico would deny any truth to the story because after all, any acknowledgement otherwise would open them up to a 1 billion dollar sales profit royalty lawsuit. So no matter what you choose to believe, it doesn't take away from the fun and entertaining story that was well directed, perfectly cast and performed, with great cinematography and score. It's still an inspirational story that will keep you rooting for the underdog, no matter how you slice it.
While the story presented in the movie may not be entirely true, it doesn't diminish the fact that it is an enjoyable film to watch. Frito-Lay, through a spokesperson, disputed Richard Montañez's claim and stated that he was not involved in creating the product line in question, according to an internal investigation. However, it is true that Montañez did rise from a floor-level position to a marketing executive at Frito-Lay and was involved in pitching new products, including Flamin' Hot Popcorn in 1994. Despite the lack of factual accuracy, screenwriter Lewis Colick mentioned that enough of the story was true. PepsiCo released a statement supporting Montañez's contributions and expressed their concern about the strain on their friendship with him and the Latino community due to the debunking of his story. Montañez retired from PepsiCo in March 2019 during an internal investigation. In the end, the movie offers outstanding acting, a compelling storyline (albeit fictional), and portrays Richard Montañez as the hero. The only mistake they made is telling us it is a true story. But the movie is fun to watch, therefore a 7/10. Watch or skip? Depends. If you like movies, yes. If it needs to be based on a true story to get you going, No.
Flamin' Hot is a quintessential underdog story reaffirming the American dream to an almost cynical degree, undermined by the sheer amount of liberties taken with the true story it's loosely based on and counterbalanced by a winning charm that's hard to resist. Like most buyopics it essentially acts as a commercial for the product it's about but it cares more about one person's story which is why it works as well as it does.
Jesse Garcia gives a great lead performance with a boundless enthusiasm making him endlessly likeable and someone who's easy to root for. He's a consistent presence since he's narrating the film as well as being in almost every scene and it's a testament to his performance that he is always loveable. It's definitely his film however, there are still a couple of nice supporting turns from Annie Gonzalez and Dennis Haysbert.
Eva Longoria's direction is really impressive because there's so much energy that she's able to sustain for the entirety of the film with inventive montages and an ability to cover a lot of time in a speedy yet breezy fashion. It feels like its going to run out of steam eventually and it never does, only toning it down when needed for a more emotional scene. Marcelo Zarvos' score is very schmaltzy which works thanks to the overall warmth.
Jesse Garcia gives a great lead performance with a boundless enthusiasm making him endlessly likeable and someone who's easy to root for. He's a consistent presence since he's narrating the film as well as being in almost every scene and it's a testament to his performance that he is always loveable. It's definitely his film however, there are still a couple of nice supporting turns from Annie Gonzalez and Dennis Haysbert.
Eva Longoria's direction is really impressive because there's so much energy that she's able to sustain for the entirety of the film with inventive montages and an ability to cover a lot of time in a speedy yet breezy fashion. It feels like its going to run out of steam eventually and it never does, only toning it down when needed for a more emotional scene. Marcelo Zarvos' score is very schmaltzy which works thanks to the overall warmth.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesRichard Montañez's claim of inventing Flamin' Hot Cheetos has been disputed. According to a 2021 Los Angeles Times report, Flamin' Hot Cheetos were invented by a team of food professionals led by Lynne Greenfeld at Frito-Lay's headquarters in Plano, Texas, to compete with spicy snacks sold in inner-city mini-marts in the Midwest. Frito-Lay would neither confirm nor deny Montañez's account and told the Times, "None of our records show that Richard was involved in any capacity in the Flamin' Hot test market", but "Different work streams tackling the same product without interacting occasionally occurred in the past when divisions operated independently." Roger Enrico also did not become the CEO of Frito-Lay until 1991, after the product and brand had been developed. Enrico died in 2016 before the Times' report; his secretary said that Montañez's phone call with Enrico took place in 1993 to pitch Flamin' Hot Popcorn, two years after Flamin' Hot Cheetos were introduced. Frito-Lay did confirm that Montañez pitched several successful snacks developed for Latino customers while working as a machine operator, and that the film's account of Montañez ascending from working as a janitor to an executive is accurate.
- GaffesFood stamps were not called SNAP benefits in 1992. They were still called food stamps until the 2010s.
- Citations
Lonny Mason: You better pray for a miracle, Montanez. Because before this is over, one way or another, you won't have a job.
- Crédits fousThe Searchlight Pictures fanfare is played in a Mexican musical style.
- Bandes originalesLas Nubes
Written by Juan Hernandez Almaguer
Performed by Little Joe & La Familia
Published by San Antonio Music Publishers, Inc.
Courtesy of La Familia Enterprises, LLC (TDI Records)
By arrangement with The Orchard
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- How long is Flamin' Hot?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Flamin' Hot: El sabor que cambió la historia
- Lieux de tournage
- Albuquerque, Nouveau-Mexique, États-Unis(Richard's house, Neighborhood exteriors and basketball court and park.)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 39 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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