Y Tu Mama Tambien (And
Your Mother Too), is a 2001 film by Alfonso Cuaron that was nominated for
Best Original Screenplay at the Academy Awards (lost to Talk to Her). I couldn’t find a winner of that award that began
with the letter Y, so am including this excellent film about two teenage boys
and a 20-something woman taking a road trip.
Tenoch (Diego Luna) and Julio (Gael Garcia Bernal) are best
friends. They meet Tenoch’s older cousin Luisa (Maribel Verdu) at a wedding,
and chat about taking a trip to Heaven’s Mouth on the Pacific Ocean. Her
husband out of town, she leaves with the two young men. Once the road trip
commences, we are taken along on a journey from Mexico City through Oaxaca
towards the blue sea. They don’t really know exactly how to get to Heaven’s
Mouth. It is questionable whether they’ll ever end up there.
The film is rated R for strong sexual content involving
teens, drug use and language. The boys are obsessed with sex, drugging, and
drinking. They are looking towards college, and with their girlfriends in Italy
for the summer, are free to take this trip.
Y Tu Mama Tambien
takes a drive through the beautiful Mexican countryside, the rural culture, the
animals, religion, poverty, and beauty that is Mexico. Some customs I saw are
not unfamiliar to me living in New Mexico: elaborate roadside memorials of
crosses, flowers and candles marking someone’s untimely death, the Day of the
Dead altars and offerings for the deceased, with all the dearly departed
favorite things. The people who live in these rural areas somehow make a life
for themselves, through animal husbandry and a bit of farming.
Alfonso Cuaron has written a unique screenplay, and that is
part of the film’s charm. Throughout the action, time will almost stop, and the
narrator tells about something we cannot see happening, but that gives the
story new meaning. It’s like the ghosts of people who have lived on this planet
before us are being given a voice.
If you are a student of film, watch this movie. There is
lots of drama, sexuality, and building and tearing down of relationships during
the journey for all three unlikely companions. It is not until the very final
scene that the big reveal happens. Everything has been leading up to it, and
when it is made clear, it is like Pow! It hits you the viewer as much as it
does our characters.
Alfonso Cuaron is the recipient of two Academy Awards, for Best
Film Editing (shared with Mark Sanger) and Best Director for the fine film Gravity in 2013. He was the first
Hispanic/Mexican to win for Best Director at the Academy Awards.
You will no doubt know Gael Garcia Bernal as a fine actor
with many movies to his credit, and with a current award winning TV show, Mozart in the Jungle. He and his two
fellow actors make this movie one you will not forget.