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Kitne Door Kitne
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Kya Yehi Pyaar
  Hai

Kranti
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   Paayenge

MITR - My friend
Haan maine bhi
  pyaar kiya

Raaz
Filhaal
Maa Tujhe Salam
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English

Reviews

A beautiful mind
The lord of the
   rings

The Cell
Don't Say A Word
Captain Corelli's
   Mandolin

Rush Hour 2
legally blonde
Original Sin
Kiss of the dragon
Sword Fish
America's
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Tomb Raider
Pearl Harbor
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Kannada

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Huchcha
Sri Manjunatha
Aunty Preethse
Andhra Hendti
Mathadaana
Maduve Agona
  Baa

Swalpa Adjust 
   Madkolli

Yajamana
Preetsu Thappenilla
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Mexican.........

Mexican

 

Movie Review: Mexican
Starring:
Brad Pitt, Julia Roberts, James Gandolfini, J.K. Simmons
Director:
Gore Verbinski (2001)

The Mexican, directed by Gore Verbinski, is a romantic action comedy starring Brad Pitt as a clumsy

bagman, and Julia Roberts as his frustrated girlfriend.
  
Forced into accepting one final assignment from his criminal boss --who has threatened to kill him if he does not comply-- Jerry (Pitt) naturally chooses to decline the untimely ultimatum posed by his angered girlfriend Samantha (Roberts). Samantha threatens to leave Jerry if he does not immediately

abandon his risky job, and she quickly dismisses the death threat as a fabrication of Jerry's dishonesty, cowardice, and overall lack of commitment.   Falling victim to an extreme lack of communication, each goes on a different direction: Samantha sets on a getaway trip to Las Vegas, while Jerry's mission takes

him to a dismal town near Toluca, Mexico, where he must concentrate on locating and retrieving a legendary pistol known as "The Mexican". Not surprisingly, their paths are marked by a series of complications: while Jerry competes with the locals who are also fiercely determined to possess The Mexican, Samantha is kidnapped by Leroy (James Gandolfini), a hitman intent on indirectly pressing Jerry to complete his mission.
   

The Mexican clearly establishes its protagonist as a victim of circumstances, whose lack of maliciousness endangers his mission as well as his life. Often amusingly portrayed by Pitt, Jerry's inadequacy is stressed

by highlighting his foreignness within the isolated and hostile Mexican town, where the character is again constrained by an inability to communicate (by either not speaking the language or not understanding a particular situation). On the other hand, The Mexican focuses on the character's female counterpart in order to demonstrate the positive results of effective communication. This is --sometimes humorously, other times dramatically--

explored in the unlikely relationship that evolves between Samantha and Leroy, who after spending many hours together on the road, develop a sensitive awareness of each other's emotional needs. This parallel plot successfully depicts a displacement of the bonding that the Jerry/Samantha couple desperately needs. In spite of this strength, The Mexican often falls victim to its own silliness, which prevents its actors from exploring bolder representations of their characters. Therefore, The Mexican is most successful in those scenes where its actors fall on either end of the spectrum of comedic to dramatic representations.
 

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