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Y tu mamá también

  • 2001
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
137K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,151
162
Gael García Bernal, Diego Luna, and Maribel Verdú in Y tu mamá también (2001)
Watch Tráiler [OV]
Play trailer2:25
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Coming-of-AgeRoad TripTeen DramaTragedyDrama

In Mexico, two teenage boys and an older woman embark on a road trip and learn a thing or two about life and each other.In Mexico, two teenage boys and an older woman embark on a road trip and learn a thing or two about life and each other.In Mexico, two teenage boys and an older woman embark on a road trip and learn a thing or two about life and each other.

  • Director
    • Alfonso Cuarón
  • Writers
    • Carlos Cuarón
    • Alfonso Cuarón
  • Stars
    • Maribel Verdú
    • Gael García Bernal
    • Daniel Giménez Cacho
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    137K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,151
    162
    • Director
      • Alfonso Cuarón
    • Writers
      • Carlos Cuarón
      • Alfonso Cuarón
    • Stars
      • Maribel Verdú
      • Gael García Bernal
      • Daniel Giménez Cacho
    • 439User reviews
    • 151Critic reviews
    • 89Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 39 wins & 48 nominations total

    Videos2

    Tráiler [OV]
    Trailer 2:25
    Tráiler [OV]
    A Guide to the Films of Alfonso Cuarón
    Clip 1:49
    A Guide to the Films of Alfonso Cuarón
    A Guide to the Films of Alfonso Cuarón
    Clip 1:49
    A Guide to the Films of Alfonso Cuarón

    Photos140

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    Top cast22

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    Maribel Verdú
    Maribel Verdú
    • Luisa Cortés
    Gael García Bernal
    Gael García Bernal
    • Julio Zapata
    Daniel Giménez Cacho
    Daniel Giménez Cacho
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    Ana López Mercado
    • Ana Morelos
    Diego Luna
    Diego Luna
    • Tenoch Iturbide
    Nathan Grinberg
    • Manuel Huerta
    Verónica Langer
    Verónica Langer
    • María Eugenia Calles de Huerta
    María Aura
    María Aura
    • Cecilia Huerta
    Giselle Audirac
    • Nicole Bazaine
    Arturo Ríos
    Arturo Ríos
    • Esteban Morelos
    Andrés Almeida
    Andrés Almeida
    • Diego 'Saba' Madero
    Diana Bracho
    Diana Bracho
    • Silvia Allende de Iturbide
    Emilio Echevarría
    Emilio Echevarría
    • Miguel Iturbide
    Marta Aura
    Marta Aura
    • Enriqueta 'Queta' Allende
    Juan Carlos Remolina
    Juan Carlos Remolina
    • Alejandro 'Jano' Montes de Oca
    Liboria Rodríguez
    • Leodegaria 'Leo' Victoria
    Silverio Palacios
    Silverio Palacios
    • Jesús 'Chuy' Carranza
    Mayra Serbulo
    • Mabel Juárez de Carranza
    • Director
      • Alfonso Cuarón
    • Writers
      • Carlos Cuarón
      • Alfonso Cuarón
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews439

    7.7137.4K
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    Featured reviews

    Buddy-51

    fascinating filmmaking

    `Y tu Mama tambien,' a stunning new product of the New Mexican Cinema that is achieving crossover success in the American film market, is a frank, open and uninhibited celebration of teenage sex – masterfully directed by Alfonso Cuaron and beautifully enacted by a trio of first-rate performers. Don't miss it – provided you are not offended by sometimes-graphic depictions of sexual activity (please note that the film is unrated). The matter-of-fact, unflinching way in which Cuaron films his sex scenes purges them of indecency and helps to bring a new frankness to a subject all too often approached by American filmmakers from the angle of tittering exploitation (wherein the directors and writers seem as adolescent in their attitudes as the characters on the screen).

    Not so here. The film centers around two boyhood chums, Tenoch and Julio, just embarking on their careers as university students, who, for one last glorious summer, decide to revel in all the wildness, hedonism and promiscuity that carefree adolescence has to offer (the title of the film is emblematic of the youthful immaturity of the characters). With their girlfriends away in Europe, the two decide to take a road trip through Mexico with Luisa, the attractive young wife of one of Tenoch's stuffed shirt cousins. While on the journey, the three of them not only indulge in all the bizarre sexual hijinks that both the situation and their hormones would lead one to expect, but they also learn a thing or two about life, about relationships and about how sex can be used both to bring people closer together as well as to pull them farther apart. For indeed, one thing the film makes very clear both to the characters and to us is that sex can often be employed as a weapon to wound those we care most about, especially with all the power shifting that takes place even in some of the most non-sexual of relationships. The boys also discover that sex can be used as a sublimation to avoid recognizing what one REALLY wants. This awakening leads to a final scene that is almost heartbreaking in its understated poignancy and pathos.

    One of the most unsettling – and thereby controversial – aspects of the film (and the one that will make it uncomfortable for many in the audience) is that it refuses to take a moralistic stance regarding its characters' behavior. The filmmakers neither approve of nor condemn what these young people do – they merely record the events with an attitude of detached objectivity that precludes any finger-wagging disapproval. If the characters learn any `lessons' from their experiences, they do so strictly on a subliminal, subconscious level – and the same goes for the audience.

    As a director, Cuaron displays a confidence and spirit rarely seen in filmmaking today. Along with his co-writer, Carlos Cuaron, the director has chosen to take an objective, almost documentary-style approach to the material, allowing the scenes to play themselves out in a way that makes them feel realistic, spontaneous and almost unscripted. He uses a shaky, handheld camera much of the time to enhance the immediacy of the experience. We often feel as if we are eavesdropping on the lives of these three fascinating individuals. As a result, not a single moment of the film feels forced, contrived or artificial. (Only the fate of one of the characters seems a bit convenient and contrived). Cuaron is not afraid to let the camera linger on a scene a moment two longer than necessary – nor is he afraid to let the camera wander off on its own from time to time, such as when it spontaneously follows a woman into the back of a roadside café to show us the cooks hard at work in the kitchen. Many of the shots even have an elegiac, travelogue feel to them.

    Cuaron has been blessed with three outstanding young actors – Diego Luna, Gael Garcia and Maribel Verdu – who bring his characters to vivid, endearing life. Utterly naturalistic in their every move, gesture and facial expression, the three of them play off each other in such a way that we never doubt for a moment the truth and sincerity of what we are seeing. American actors please take note!

    `Y tu Mama tambien' is a stylistic triumph from first moment to last. It has a playful, expansive spirit, as reflected in its openhearted attitude towards sex, its wry humor, its affection for its people and its country, and its visual appeal and inventiveness (Emmanuel Lubezki did the glorious cinematography). The film has heart, soul and chutzpah. What more could a jaded filmgoer want?
    lawprof

    Alfonso Cuaron and Company Tease and Dare

    The two teenage males in this sharply etched film, "Y tu mama tambien," are obsessed with sex and view its pleasures as something akin to joyfully skating across a frozen lake. As the story develops the ice gets thinner and thinner, its incapacity to carry the weight of their fantasies advances faster than their growing inevitable end stop - maturity.

    The Mexico of the teenagers and their generally stoned friends is one of affluence and political connectedness. One father belongs to a country club that features one of the biggest private swimming pools I've seen - no film set here (the pool is the scene of a very, ah, unusual depiction of teen horniness). Neither of the lads cares much about the actual political and social issues occurring during their adventures and which are seamlessly integrated into their story. Their futures are a blank to them but a blank untroubled by the need to be concerned or ambitious.

    And then arrives the femme fatale, a beautiful, smart but very raunchy just-left-husband gal with whom they take off in a beaten-up old station wagon to find, ostensibly, a secret beach. Of course what the guys have in mind is seduction.

    Without a polemical discourse the viewer is carried into the isolation and poverty of much of Mexico as asphalt yields to hard dirt roads leading to barely navigable sand traps. The people they encounter along the way are realized subtly but effectively.

    These teens aren't really so likable but they do show occasional promise of growing up, a redeeming feature. This is less a road film than it is a comedy of (very bad) manners. The director and three leading characters have taken raunch to a new and interesting cinematic plane.

    While these kids may be a parent's nightmare, they become more complex, and inevitably more insightful, as the film develops. By the end they are very, very different people and in danger of becoming sort of plain vanilla post-teens (whatever the Mexican equivalent of the Japanese "salaryman" is, they may well be launched along that path).

    This film is rated "R" but many will wonder how it avoided an "X." Be forewarned. But some of the sex scenes are hilarious - especially if the viewer has ever been a teenager. :)

    Cuaron uses voiceovers not so much to explain the story but to quietly show that all lives have "sidebar" events beyond the tale being told, events that can be described in one or two sentences and which illuminate the fullness of a character's journey.

    The scenery is gorgeous.

    Definitely a different and engrossing story.
    sev_leclair

    Fantastically good fun to watch!

    I saw the film twice in 2 days (in original version), and I enjoyed it very much. It is titillating, at times hilarious, touching, candid, serious etc... Roller-coaster of emotions! It is the first film I have seen with Gael Garcia Bernal (Julio in this film), and boy is he great! I love the portrait the film draws of "Teenage Boys lust". The contrast with the mature and controlled Luisa is very interesting. Altogether, I'd recommend it warmly to anyone who enjoys road movies in general and great characters. Obviously it is better in the original, so if you understand a bit of Spanish, don't be put off by the subtitles (you end up reading them really quickly and still enjoy the images...).
    10cheriberry

    Simply The Best!

    From the recent comments on this film board, it's amazing how people can watch this film all the way through and at the end not have any idea what it was about.

    This was quite simply one of the best films I've seen in recent years. Using three central characters -- two immature adolescent males and a young woman in crisis -- set in a road-trip situation, it was hardly a road-trip movie. Nor was it an adolescent movie. Nor was it a woman-in-crisis movie. Nor was it about sex. Instead, what starts out with a sizzling but ditzy prologue becomes something much deeper and much more profound as it goes along. By the end I was breathless and somewhat stunned. The character study is amazing. The societal insights are haunting. The shared humanity it exposes is painful at time but ultimately reaffirming and uplifting. These are three of the most memorable, identifiable and completely human characters I've seen on screen in ages. They taught me more about life and the human species than the last ten movies I've seen put together. I'll not soon forget Julio, Tenoch and Luisa and their eye-opening journey to Boca del Cielo.
    mdopooh

    Funny... but above all, a really intelligent motion picture

    Alfonso Cuaron is simply one of the best Mexican directors in recent years in Mexican film production. His incredible AIDS-driven comedy, "Solo Con Tu Pareja" was maybe the most funny Mexican picture in a long time, and his always present criticism to the way of life of Mexican people in a city such as Mexico City, is incredible accurate and clever. His other projects in the United States, "Little Princess" and "Great Expectations" were beautifully-manufactured motion pictures, with the help (or support, if you may) of the marvellous photographer Emmanuel Lubenzki ("Sleepy Hollow", and the above-mentioned Cuaron movies). Returning to his home country this time, Cuaron displays such magic and poetic visuals, in contrast with the subtle criticism to the society in Mexico, and the clever and sharp dialogs between the leading stars, using every word young Mexicans use to apply in their conversations.

    "Y Tu Mama Tambien" (And Your Mother Too) is, in the surface, a really funny story about 2 friends-almost-brothers, Tenoch Iturbide (an outstanding Diego Luna) and Julio (a really incredible performance for the recent Ariel, the Mexican Academy Award, winner Gael Garcia Bernal, in another excellent portray of a young guy with "issues"), that plan a trip to an imaginary beach, "Boca del Cielo" (Heaven´s Mouth) in order to flirt with a Spanish girl, married with Tenoch's cousin, and portrayed by a credible Maribel Verdu.

    But this is only the "surface" of this road movie. In fact, we are dealing with dreams and realities, with social problems and political ones. Tenoch is a young guy living with a millionaire family, son of a wealthy businessman with friends in the highest "stairs" of Mexican politics, with a second name such as Iturbide (one of the most important and powerful leaders of Mexican politic history). And, in contrast, Julio is a middle-low-class guy, living with his mother, brothers and sisters, in a small department, with a last name such as Zapata (a revolutionary leader in Mexican history, with native origins, that took part in the Revolution at the beginning of 20th Century). This is a clever and sharp critic of the different models of living of these 2 friends, and in fact, of all Mexican citizens (I know it, because I'm Mexican, too).

    Also, the movie has an excellent narration by Daniel Gimenez Cacho, star of a previous Cuaron film, "Solo Con Tu Pareja", that explains the things we cannot see, but that we can understand and feel. The "subtle critic about Mexican society and traditions" that I have talked about all along this comment, is the one thing that makes this picture go from a funny comedy to an intelligent essay of the lives of young people, social classes, discovery and re-discovery of personality and our own soul, and the final revelation of who we are and what we become when time passes by. In the lives of Julio and Tenoch there is no redemption, but a clear message of their goal in life, their true feelings about friendship, and their sexuality. This road trip is only a pretext to tell a story about discovery and finding our true nature.

    Yes, maybe it is a little provocative and bold, but because of these characteristics, "And Your Mother Too" is an incredible motion picture, true to its meaning and compromised with the reality it is trying to show. We care about this people, we care about their problems, and at the end, we care about our own society, and we care about what we have become with time. And the true meaning of the movie's title, "And Your Mother Too", within the narrative of the film, is simply hilarious.

    Give this movie a chance, and see it. You won't be disappointed. It has an excellent direction, excellent photography, its is very sexy, it showcases credible performances by all its cast. But above all, it has a real story, real character development, and real power. One great movie from a great Mexican director. Maybe not his best, but really near.

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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Alfonso Cuarón did not want to cast Luna for the role of Tenoch because he was a teen idol and soap opera star. Bernal convinced Cuarón to hire Luna because their strong existing friendship would make the performance of their characters' friendship much easier. Cuarón ultimately hired Luna because he became convinced that their bond would produce a natural and honest performance.
    • Goofs
      In the scene where Louisa wakes up in the car at the beach, in the shot inside the car, her jeans are torn at the left knee. Subsequent shots show an un-torn pair of jeans.
    • Quotes

      Luisa: Who cares who you two fucked when you come that fast!

    • Alternate versions
      Several scenes edited out of the final movie were made available for public viewing on the movie's official Web site. The director claims to have created multiple edits of this film to satisfy censorship rules around the world. According to the director, one of these edits, allegedly intended for Mexican distribution in protest of that country's heavy censorship, runs less than 10 minutes.
    • Connections
      Edited into Y tu mamá también: Deleted Scenes (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Go Shopping
      Performed by Bran Van 3000

      Contains samples from "Shopping" written by Eek-A-Mouse (as Ripton Hylton) and Jamal-Ski

      Published by Plaything Music, Explicit Two & Eek-A-Mouse Music

      administered by Plaything Music (ASCAP)

      Eek-A-Mouse appears courtesy of Explicit Entertainment, by license from Sunset Boulevard Entertainment

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    FAQ21

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 8, 2001 (Mexico)
    • Country of origin
      • Mexico
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • And Your Mother Too
    • Filming locations
      • Huatulco, Oaxaca, Mexico
    • Production companies
      • Anhelo Producciones
      • Besame Mucho Pictures
      • Producciones Anhelo
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $13,839,658
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $408,091
      • Mar 17, 2002
    • Gross worldwide
      • $33,616,692
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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