Jaime Humberto Hermosillo Movies
Jaime Humberto Hermosillo has been hailed as a less frenetic, Mexican version of Spanish director
Pedro Almodovar and has become one of modern Mexican cinema's most off-beat filmmakers, gaining considerable acclaim, popularity and notoriety for making films about traditionally taboo subjects ranging from blatantly gay-themed films to experimental explorations of a family's bathroom habits. In the U.S., his best known film remains
Dona Herlinda and Her Son, considered to be the first film in Latin America to present homosexuality in a positive light. Raised in Guadalajara, the artistic center of Mexico, Hermosillo received his education from the University of Mexico Film School and began making films in the late 1970s. Most of his twenty-odd films were made by independent companies. As an openly gay person, something somewhat unusual in conservative Mexico, many of his films deal outwardly or subtly with homosexual issues. Still, audiences accept him because the quality of his films, that range from drama to comedy, is so consistently high. Bringing to his stories a rare wit and sophisticated complexity, many of Hermosillo's works contain universal themes that deal with tribulations of the middle class, fears, loneliness and of course, sexuality. He first gained notice in Mexico for his fourth film
Passion According to Berenice (1977). His 1978 film Deceitful Appearances, which he made using non-union cast and crew was banned in Mexico until 1982 not only for the labor disputes involved, but also for its subject matter of a greedy couple's attempt to exploit a dying, very wealthy man. Hailed as a gender comedy, many of the scenes strained the acceptable boundaries of gender bending to the limit, and like many of Hermosillo films, features a genuinely surprising twist at the end. From the late '70s through the late '80s, Hermosillo has occasionally collaborated with noted author
Gabriel Garcia Marquez on screenplays for films such as
Mary My Dearest (1979) and
The Summer of Miss Forbes (1988). When not making films, Hermosillo teaches filmmaking at the University of Guadalajara and since the late '80s has occasionally made films in conjunction with his students. One of those films, the character exploration Bathroom Intimacies, a cinema verite look into the crisis suffered by a troubled family as seen through a bathroom mirror, evoked critical comparisons to an
Andy Warhol film. Another experimental film, Homework was a minimally-edited erotic film shot in real time over a four-day period to chronicle a female film student's latest production -- a record of her having a sexual encounter with her former husband. Following the success of Homework, he created the similarly themed, but longer Forbidden Homework (1992) which centered on a handsome young filmmaker's seduction of a much older actress whom he had loved for years. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

- 2010
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- 2005
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A deluded woman is torn between her family and the man she loves in this dark drama from Mexican filmmaker Jaime Humberto Hermosillo. Aurora (Maria Rojo) is a middle-aged woman whose obsessive love for famous singer Andres (Rogelio Guerra) led to a brief tryst that left her with child. Many years later, her son Mauricio (Tizoc Arroyo), an aspiring filmmaker, is suffering from deep depression, and Aurora travels to be near him after he attempts suicide. While Aurora's love for Andres has not faded with time, despite his lack of interest in her, the realities of Mauricio's condition force her to look to her son's needs. When Mauricio asks his mother to play the leading role in his first film, she agrees, but the story she wants to put on videotape is not Mauricio's screenplay, but an open letter to Andres. Dos Auroras (aka Two Auroras) received its American premier at the 2005 Chicago Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- María Rojo, Tizoc Arroyo, (more)

- 2005
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- 2003
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- 2003
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- 2002
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Jaime Humberto Hermosillo's supernatural drama eXXXorcisms stars Alberto Estrella as a night watchman. Roberto (Estrella) is hired to guard a mall that is supposedly haunted by the ghost of a young homosexual who killed himself after a disastrous relationship. Roberto was the other person in that relationship, and he spends the night facing his past. EXXXorcisms was screened at the Toronto Film Festival. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Alberto Estrella, Jose Juan Meraz, (more)

- 1997
- R
- Add De Noche Vienes, Esmeralda to Queue
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While films about polygamous men who don't bother telling their wives about their other wives are not uncommon, those concerning polyandrous women doing the same thing are rare. This featherweight romantic comedy from Mexican director Jaime Humberto Hermosillo is one of those films. Esmeralda is passionate about life and simply has too much love in her heart to be monogamous. She is just about to marry her sixth husband, a student named Pedro, when one of her other five husbands calls the police and she is arrested. She tells her story to the stern judge Solorio, and her reasons for marrying each husband are revealed in flashback. It doesn't take long for the judge to become as enchanted by her as the others. Like other Hermosillo films, this one is filled with inside-jokes for film buffs. For example, one of Esmeralda's husbands is a gay man masquerading behind the marriage to appease his overbearing mother. This is a direct reference to Hermosillo's Doña Herlinda and Her Son. In the story's final segments, the director pays tribute to Gene Kelly's famous dance scene from Singing in the Rain via the song "Amorcito Corazon." ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- María Rojo, Claudio Obregón, (more)

- 1996
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This Danish omnibus film consists of 20 shorts, by a bevy of international directors; the project
as a whole was conceived by Danish visual artist Ane Mette Ruge and Dutch opera-director Jacob F. Schokking. The title represents a pun; in addition to its obvious sensationalistic implications (which is used ironically - almost nothing in the film, aside from some incidental nudity, is exploitative), the "everything" refers to the plethora of subjects at hand, with the filmmakers exploring topics from national identity to ornithology, to trips abroad to Vietnam and Brazil, to the history of Berlin. Shown at the 1998 Gothenburg Film Festival. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi
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- 1993
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Long ago, Pilar Landeros ran away from her husband and child and changed her name so that she could have a career as a singer. Now, she is rich and famous. Not everyone has forgotten her past, as she discovers when the new maid she has hired turns out to be her angry and vengeful daughter. In this psychological drama, the two are forced to come to terms with one another as more and more dark secrets from the past come home to roost. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Lucha Villa, María Rojo, (more)

- 1992
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In this provocative drama from Mexican filmmaker Jaime Humberto Hermosillo, Julian Pastor plays a young college student who is living with his aunt. The student is taking a course in filmmaking and is working on a short video as a class project. An attractive middle-aged woman, Marieda (Maria Rojo), arrives to audition for a part in the video; when the film's male lead fails to show up, the young man takes the role as he auditions a romantic scene with the woman, and later they move from pretend lovemaking to the real thing. But as it turns out, this isn't the first time the boy and the woman have met, which leads to a disturbing revelation. Forbidden Homework was a semi-sequel to Hermosillo accalimed feature La Tarea. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- 1990
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Virginia (Maria Rojo) is taking a class at film school, and has decided on her solo project for the class. She will film herself and her ex-husband Marcelo (Jose Alonso) (who likes to leave the light on) while they make love. She carefully positions a camera under a chair, and maneuvers her ex-husband into making love to her in front of it. Eventually her strategems lead him to discover the camera and the ruse. At first, he is outraged, but eventually he gets into the spirit of the thing, and gets in a plug for his undertaking business while he's at it. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- Starring:
- María Rojo, José Alonso, (more)

- 1990
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- Add Intimidades en un Cuarto de Bano to Queue
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Intimate details in the lives of five family members become extremely clear from the vantage point of their bathroom mirror, in this innovative drama. Bertha (María Navarro) is the mother of the clan, and spends her afternoons away from the house with her lovers. Her husband Juan (Emilio Echeverría) takes those times more or less in stride - he locks himself in the bathroom with his girlie magazines. Their daughter Gabriela (Gabriela Roel) and her impecunious husband Roberto (Alvaro Guerrero) also live there. The final member of the household is the maid, Esperanza (María Rojo). The entire film takes place in the family's only bathroom. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Gabriela Roel, Alvaro Guerrero, (more)

- 1989
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This low-budget, futuristic science fiction story finds the Northern part of Mexico annexed to the United States. Sex is forbidden, and the United States plunges towards their second Civil War. The feature has the feel of an underground film from the 1960s. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Magnolia Rivas, Rafael Monroy, (more)

- 1987
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The Mexican/Spanish El Verano de La Senora Forbes (Summer of Miss Forbes) features Hanna Schygulla in the leading role. Schygulla plays a German governess, in charge of two Mexican boys while their parents are absent. The kids despise the governess, who is rigid and tyrannical. They go so far as to plan her murder, but find they don't need to kill her: beset with dozens of personal demons, the woman has been spiritually dead for years. One of six late-1980s Spanish TV adaptations of the novels of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, El Verano de la Senora Forbes was directed by Jaime Humberto Hermosillo, of Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands fame. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Hanna Schygulla, Francisco Gattorno, (more)

- 1986
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In this sly Mexican sex comedy, a manipulative mama deftly manages the life of her homosexual son so that he can have his cake and eat it too. A woman of means, she does this by allowing her son, a doctor, to tryst in her home with his lover. Putting her son's happiness above all else, she then arranges a marriage of convenience to a woman. When the marriage is consummated, the young male lover gets terribly jealous and this creates problems until the irrepressible Doña Herlinda again gets involved. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Marco Antonio Trevino, Guadalupe Del Toro, (more)

- 1984
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- 1979
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With a screenplay by the Nobel Prize-winning author Gabriel García Márquez and noted Mexican director Jaime Humberto Hermosillo, who also directed this film, there are several inventive and whimsical facets to this story about an ill-fated love. When Hector (Hector Bonilla) comes back from his usual night of burglarizing houses, he is surprised to find his former love María (María Rojo) in his apartment, dressed in a wedding gown. María breaks down as she tells Hector how she has been jilted at the altar, and later she turns on some tap water and milk comes pouring out -- for María is a real magician. The two soon re-establish their affection for each other, and María convinces Hector to give up his life as a cat burglar and join her in putting on a magic show. Hector agrees, and the couple begin a new career together. But just as their show becomes better known, María's van breaks down on the road and she hitches a ride with a busload of very strange-looking people, disembarking at an insane asylum. The more she argues that she is perfectly sane, the less anyone believes her -- sanity is not easily recognizable, apparently. So María is literally imprisoned, while Hector becomes convinced she has left him for good. Time goes by. Will Hector find María at the asylum? And if so, what happens then? Classic García-Márquez all the way, the political and sociological aspects of this ultimately absurd situation are told with a wry sense of humor. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Hector Bonilla, María Rojo, (more)

- 1977
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- 1977
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A pair of young Mexican boys ditch school in favor of catching an afternoon matinee, only to find themselves on an adventure wild enough to spawn a movie of its own in this richly textured children's adventure from director Jaime Humberto Hermosillo. Though they wanted to see a movie, these two hooky-playing grade-schoolers are promptly busted and nearly expelled. Though a ride home with a local truck driver seems to signal the end of their afternoon excursion, the stakes are soon raised when a gang of thieves hijack the truck and whisk the kids away on a breathless journey that's well worth the price of admission. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- 1974
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- 1972
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- 1969
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