A psychedelic multiple-storyline around a disco called "El Colombian Dream".A psychedelic multiple-storyline around a disco called "El Colombian Dream".A psychedelic multiple-storyline around a disco called "El Colombian Dream".
Sebastian Celis
- Bebé 2
- (as Sebastián Celis)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
With El Colombian Dream, Felipe Aljure has once again been able to break paradigms as he has demonstrated that it is possible to produce and direct Colombian cinema on a par with any internationally produced film. Tarantino's, Jean-Pierre Jeunet's (Amelie) and the influence of other well-known directors are somehow present in this movie. If you want to see a cruel, black-humored critique of a dreadful aspect of Colombian society, watch this movie. Worth mentioning as well are the actors and actresses that make the cast of the film, virtually unknown in Colombia, but with a great potential to become Colombia's next generation of exportable talent. Trivia fact: the twins were chosen for the six-fingered foot of one of them.
This is a Terrible movie, in almost every aspect, murky cinematography, sloppy special effects, and cheap sets, the argument it's full of gaps, flat, slow and predictable, and the direction it's Kind of ED WOOD in a LSD trip... It's a Colombian movie, and one of the main lines is: It's better to born in Colombia than be dead....Great, it's also very patriot.
It's Just another movie about Colombians and drugs...from a very drugged point of view.
125 lost minutes in my life, and 125 millions of dead brain cells... don't waste your time, nor your brain by watching this...
It's Just another movie about Colombians and drugs...from a very drugged point of view.
125 lost minutes in my life, and 125 millions of dead brain cells... don't waste your time, nor your brain by watching this...
Whenever a film maker goes short of ideas about Colombia, he resorts to the drug theme. This is a permanent cliché in the movie industry and it is easy to forgive if it is the sloppy work of an outsider. But when a Colombian director needs to go to these extremes of bad taste to broadcast (once again) the false notion that his country is a narcotics paradise, you can only feel sorry for him. What a narrow mind and what a scarce imagination.
I only hope that the next time someone uses the name of our country in the title of a film or any artistic work, it be with the purpose of honoring it and not as a commercial gimmick. And yes, that it be of any artistic value.
I only hope that the next time someone uses the name of our country in the title of a film or any artistic work, it be with the purpose of honoring it and not as a commercial gimmick. And yes, that it be of any artistic value.
Soooo NOT "another attempt to exploit the cliché of what Colombia is not." I have seen Colombian movies, and most of them do fit perfectly into that description, but this movie is different. It shows a new format in Colombian films, the story is fresh even though it does deal with drugs, and the conflicts of the characters are perfectly plotted and put together into a delightful, artistic movie. Don't think "Mary full of grace" is all Colombia has to offer. This movie is full of wit, and was cleverly written and filmed. One of my top ten. Oh, and if you're into Colombian movies, you have to watch "La Estrategia del Caracol." That's a classic and is also very, very good.
The Director longs for Colombian cinema to be taken seriously outside of Colombia. This will not be the film to accomplish that goal. The film is basically another story about the tragedy of the drug trade, this time in a hyper-frenetic magical realism style. One of the reasons this film will have difficulty being accepted outside of the Spanish-speaking world is that it will be virtually impossible to create subtitles. This might not be an issue for a film "purist" but from a practical point of view if you don't speak Spanish the film probably looks like a sick cartoon. Obviously the director has talent and creativity but it needs to channeled a little better.
Did you know
- TriviaThe character of Gonzalo de Sagarminaga, "Enrique 'El Susi' Arango", is named after assistant director Enrique Arango, who's also called 'El Susi'.
- GoofsIn one of the scenes where 'El Susi' Arango is shown flying, you can see in the right bottom corner the shadow of the crane that's lifting him up.
Details
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- Country of origin
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $883,250
- Runtime
- 2h(120 min)
- Color
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