1:37 pm By Maegan La Mala · Music · 5 Comments
16 Feb 2011I have a love/hate relationship with Calle 13. Some of their lyrics are hot but then they say some stuff that goes beyond dirty talk and seems sexist. Now they release a video for their song “Baile de los Pobres” . The video is supposed to be kind of a big deal because:
1: It has a naked guy in it (we’re featuring the edited version below)
2: The video was directed by Diego Luna.
The story isn’t anything out of the ordinary, star cross rich girl, poor boy lovers with a hell of lot of “exoticizing” going on which seems very not cool to me.
Que creen?
6:00 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · mexico|Movies|New York · 2 Comments
29 Apr 2009Don’t think Macha is the only one who can do some objectifying.

Gael Garcia Bernal and Diego Luna are in New York City to see me. Pero first they had to stop at the Tribeca Film Festival for the U.S. premiere of Rudo y Cursi.
Gael can give me his Mexican flu whenever he wants.
Via / Lossip
6:13 am By Maegan La Mala · GLBT|Movies · 3 Comments
30 Mar 2009Cuz Mala is a single mami, I never get to see movies when they come out in the theaters. I have to wait for them to come out on DVD and then wait for the kids to go to sleep. This past weekend, my Netflix finally sent me the next Oscar winning film on my queue, Gus Van Sant’s, Milk starring Sean Penn.
Now there will be some spoilers so please if you haven’t seen the movie or don’t know anything about Harvey Milk then you may want to stop reading now.
That said, I knew about Harvey Milk before I saw the film. So the story wasn’t a surprise. What was a surprise was in this story about the GLBT movement or at least Milk’s role in it, was how white it was. I don’t know San Fran or The Castro District pero there had to be more people of color involved in the struggle. Claro this assumption comes from my own knowledge and experience in dealing with the GLBT movement here on the east coast, a la Sylvia Rivera.
I was also surprised that Diego Luna was in the film. Then I was disappointed. Luna plays Jack Lira, Milk’s lover aka the tragic gay Latino. Don’t get me wrong. Some of my favorite lines in the film are related to Jack like, “The Latino has locked himself in the closet” when well Luna’s character during what can only be described as a temper tantrum , locks himself in a closet. Another line that made me giggle was when a drunk Dan White, played by Josh Brolin, says ” I don’t even know who you are, you just showed up out of nowhere, Latino man.”
The fact is that we, the viewers never really know who Jack Lira is. Now I know the movie is Milk not Lira, pero I felt that Lira’s character was a caricature, a childish alcoholic who was seen as a problem to Milk’s political aspirations and was prone to be jealous and mentally unstable to the point of killing himself in a dramatic fashion almost worthy of a novela. Even in interviews with Luna about playing Lira , Luna describes Lira as “simple”.
Pero all in all, Milk is an enjoyable film. Penn does a good job, I thought, especially in examining the issues of power and personal politics pero it does a poor job of looking at the bigger picture, especially in how the POC queer community played a role in the struggles of the 70′s beyond cooking, dancing, drinking and offing themselves.
What do others who have seen the film think?
9:56 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · mexico|Movies · 1 Comment
27 Nov 2007
While Gael Garcia Bernal and Diego Luna have been working together on human rights causes and film production projects, it’s been a moment since we’ve seen this Mexican duo together acting. Well wait no more. They will star in the Carlos Cuaron (little bro to Alfonso who directed them in Y Tu Mama Tambien) flick Rudo y Cursi. The film is about two professional soccer playing brothers.
I can’t wait!
Via / Noche Latina
Image Via / Blog del Cine
7:48 am By Maegan La Mala · Activism|Celebrities|Justice|mexico · Comments Off
13 Aug 2007
Mexican heartthrob Gael Garcia Bernal has joined forces with his buddy actor Diego Luna in a crusade to bring attention to human rights offenses and impunity in Mexico, namely in Ciudad Juarez and the Mexican state it calls home, Chihuahua.
Gael and Diego have been working on a documentary called “Doble injusticia: feminicidio y tortura en Ciudad Juárez y Chihuahua” (“Double injustice: feminicide and torture in Ciudad Juárez and Chihuahua”), and say it’s time to “stand up to impunity”.
The documentary was produced with the help of the Mexican Commision for the Defense and Promotion of Human Rights and the international non-profit Witness. According to Mexico’s Milenio, the film
“narrates the story of Nerya Cervantes, who disappeared in 2003 and that of David Meza, her cousin, who was tortured so that he would implicate himself of Neyra’s murder, one the many that occur in Chihuahua.”
Diego and Gael shared the film with a select group of people in Mexico City this weekend — at a dinner which cost about $300 per head – but left out invites to politicians. According to the actors, only one public official was invited (the head of the Human Rights Commission) and snubbed the others because the event “wasn’t to see them but to share with socially responsible people the state of human rights.”
Via / Milenio
11:22 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · mexico|Movies · Comments Off
29 Jul 2007This Mexican film, released here in the U.S. on July 11th, seems like an interesting interweaving of tales Amores Perros style plus Gael Garcia Bernal and Diego Luna are on board as executive producers. That was enough for me to lay down some cash this weekend to see DramaMex.
2:36 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Entertainment|Movies|Sports · 3 Comments
16 May 2007
Most of us know Diego Luna from his role in Y tu mamá también (and, if you are a connoisseur of bad telenovelas like me, from Televisa’s El Premio Mayor), but now the actor is branching out and becoming a film maker, and his first film, JC Chávez, explores the life of Mexican boxer Julio César Chávez. Why Chávez? According to Luna:
“…because for 14 years he never lost a fight and for 11 and a half years, he maintained his title as champion of the world.”
The documentary, which chronicles the life of the “greatest living Mexican athlete” will debut on Friday in Mexico City, Guadalajara, Tijuana, Monterrey and Culiacán (Chávez’s hometown). There’s still no word on if and when it will make it the U.S.
8:00 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Events|Movies|New York City · 2 Comments
8 May 2007
The Tribeca Film Festival, which started in 2002 as a vehicle to bring people back to downtown Manhattan post 9-11-01, celebrated it 6th year and closed this past weekend. This year the festival spanned more of the borough of Manhattan than ever before with films, festival, and discussions with the filmmakers and actors. Featured are no less than 26 films with Latino/Hispanic content or filmmakers. These films explore a range of genres from documentaries to drama and highlight well known cinema players and new blood.
1:30 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Chismes|Movies · Comments Off
30 Jan 2007
There’s gonna be a swoon fest throughout some Mexican states as talented hotties Gael Garcia Bernal and Diego Luna showcase documentary films. The tour, titled Ambulante 2007, was started by the dynamic duo last year and received critical acclaim for bringing documentaries into commercial theaters.
Story y Image Via / Univision.com
1:50 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|mexico|Movies · 4 Comments
16 Jun 2006
No, your eyes don’t deceive you. Mexican actor Diego Luna is slated to play a young Michael Jackson in a new film directed by Harmony Korine called “Mister Lonely”, according to Univision.com:
It sounds incredible but it’s true: according to the Reforma newspaper, Diego Luna will play the role of Michael Jackson during his youth, though we don’t have a clue as to how he will do it. Presumably it wil be in the time after he started lightening his skin.
The premise of the film? Not easily explained, but according to Univision.com:
According to reports from the European daily Screen, Diego Luna’s character meets Marilyn Monroe (Samantha Morton) in Paris and follows her to a commune in Scotland, where they both meet Charlie Chaplin and Shirley Temple. The action eventually move to Brazil, where some missionaries get wrapped up in the comedy.
Put down the crack pipe.
Via / Univision.com
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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