Backdrop
Broken Flag

Broken Flag (1979)

1h 36m | PG-13

⭐ 6.667 / 10

When a group of young filmmakers witness and film a crime of passion, the most outrageous blackmail of the century begins. By means of a fantastic plan, the filmmakers send to the murderer, a financial and industrial big shot, a copy of the movie that incriminates him and they demand him an improvement of the standard of living for the working class.

Director: Gabriel Retes

Studio: Cooperativa Río Mixcoac

Genre: Drama, Thriller

Video: 720p

▶ Watch

Cast

Manolo Fábregas

Manolo Fábregas

as Ing. Eduardo Vallejo Arizpe

Aarón Hernán

Aarón Hernán

as Don Luis Iriarte

Tina Romero

Tina Romero

as Ana Mendizabal

Jorge Humberto Robles

Jorge Humberto Robles

as Alberto Huesca

Ignacio Retes

Ignacio Retes

as Ernesto

Jorge Santoyo

Jorge Santoyo

as Antonio Orihuela

Reviews

By ciudadsana

Murder, ethics and exploitation During the quarantine I have seen a lot of foreign cinema, and very little Mexican, which I want to amend. Of the three great contemporaries, Cuarón, Del Toro and Iñarritú, I have seen everything or almost everything, so let's diversify. There are three Retes films that I really liked at the time, each one with its limitations: El Bulto , Bienvenido/ Welcome and A sweet scent of death . This one in particular shows two of his personal obsessions: cinema about cinema, with a group of independent filmmakers at the center of the story, and casting his relatives, this time both his father and mother. Here the central performance of two greats stands out: Manolo Fábregas and Aarón Hernán. A smile comes to my mouth when I see the beginnings of Tina Romero and Paloma Woolrich. And 40 years later, my Mexico with the same problems: one law for the rich and another for the rest; violence against women; saving face more important than justice; and incidentally, the budget problems to do anything in cinema. Hernán's physical resemblance to then-president, José López Portillo, does not go unnoticed. The production design marks a radical difference between the impoverished filmmakers and the powerful ones surrounded by porcelain, sculptures and baroque details, even in the smallest piece of furniture. The last act, definitely falls into classic seventies exploitation, with blood, violence and nudity, to generate empathy for the characters, but also so that the public goes home scandalized.