Arturo Ripstein Movies
Widely considered Mexico's most celebrated and respected contemporary filmmaker, as well as perhaps the only director to have truly inherited Luis Buñuel's mantle,
Arturo Ripstein is a legend in his own right. His films have earned both fame and infamy for taking melodrama to its macabre extremes, and they reflect the director's fascination -- one shared by Buñuel -- with
l'amour fou and claustrophobia. Although his films have been enthusiastically received outside of Mexico in France and Spain, Ripstein is largely unknown to American audiences, an oversight that is unfortunate at the very least.
Born in Mexico City on December 13, 1945, Ripstein was the son of producer Alfredo Ripstein, Jr. Growing up on the sets of his father's films, he became infatuated with the idea of becoming a filmmaker at a very young age. He began his professional career at the age of 19 as the (unbilled) assistant director to Buñuel on
El Ángel Exterminador (1962). This working relationship gave rise to a close personal friendship that continued until Buñuel's death, and although Ripstein has claimed that he learned very little from working with the master director (because, he once stated in an interview, Buñuel was "perfect"), the latter's influences on his films are unmistakable.
Ripstein made his directorial and screenwriting debut in 1965 with
Tiempo De Morir (
Time to Die). A story of murder and revenge, it explored many of the themes that the director would make the trademarks of his brand of "macabre melodrama" in the years to come. The film's script was written by
Carlos Fuentes and Nobel Prize winner Gabriel García Márquez; Ripstein would subsequently collaborate with a number of important Latin American writers, including Joss Emilio Pancheco (
El Castillo De La Pureza (
The Castle of Purity), 1974, and
El Santo Oficio (
Holy Office), 1974); José Donoso (
El Lugar Sin Limites (
Hell Has No Limits), 1977); Vincente Leñero (
La Tía Alejandra (
Aunt Alexandra), 1978); and Luis Spota (
Cadena Perpetua (
In For Life), 1978).
During the '70s, Ripstein garnered increasing recognition for his films, particularly
El Santo Oficio, which was shown in competition at the 1974 Cannes Festival. An account of the sufferings of a Jewish family forced to flee to Mexico during the Spanish Inquisition, it drew on Ripstein's own Jewish heritage and provided a stark exploration of the claustrophobia of oppressive secrets and assumed identity.
Due to a lack of funding for his films, Ripstein occasionally made commissioned movies, such as
La Ilegal (
The Illegal Woman, 1979). Produced by Televicine, the filial company of the Mexican media conglomerate Televisa, it starred one of Mexico's biggest starlets at the time, Lucia Méndez as an illegal Mexican immigrant in the United States.
Such commissioned films were thankfully the exception to the norm rather than the norm itself, and Ripstein continued to do his best work on an independent level. After directing
Imperio De La Fortuna (
The Realm of Fortune, 1987), which was based on a text by Juan Rolfo, he began working with his wife
Paz Alicia Garciadiego, a collaboration that produced some of Ripstein's most celebrated films. Of his work with screenwriter Garciadiego, the director once quipped that she, as a Catholic, introduces sin to their scripts, whereas he, as a Jew, provides the guilt.
One of Ripstein's more acclaimed efforts with Garciadiego was
Principio y Fin (
The Beginning and the End, 1994). Based upon the novel by Nobel Prize-winning Egyptian author Naguib Mahfouz, the film traced the disintegration of a family following the sudden death of the father. It won the San Sebastian Film Festival's Gold Shell award; that same year, Ripstein's
La Reina De La Noche (
The Queen of the Night, 1994) was shown in competition at Cannes. A fictionalized biography of legendary Mexican singer
Lucha Reyes, it was melodrama at its most effective, combining beauty and tragedy with the authority of real-life occurrences.
Profundo Carmesí (
Deep Crimson, 1996), was Ripstein's most celebrated work to date. Based upon the real-life "Lonely Hearts Murders" that took place in Mexico during the late 1940s, it was perhaps Ripstein's most full-bodied and successful exploration of
l'amour fou. Of this brand of crazy love that takes place between the film's main characters, a badly aging gigolo and an excessively overweight nurse with halitosis, Ripstein stated "There's nothing like mad love: it shatters, corrupts, transforms...Nothing like mad love to break, tear down, and undo the house of social order. Nothing is more flippant, sacrilegious, or heretic. Nothing more human." The film won a number of awards at the Venice Film Festival and earned a Special Mention in Latin American Cinema at that year's Sundance Festival.
In 1997, Ripstein was awarded the National Prize for the Arts in Mexico, becoming the only filmmaker aside from Buñuel to have received the honor. That same year, he began working on a new film,
El Evangelio De Las Maravillas (
Divine), 1998). Based on actual events that took place in Mexico during the 1970s, it was a comedy-drama about a religious cult. The film was screened at Cannes. The following year, Ripstein's
El Coronel No Tiene Quien Le Escriba (
No One Writes to the Colonel was also screened in competition at the festival. Based on García Márquez's novel, it was another study of a character trapped in a fatal destiny, driven into a hopeless void by his needy supplication to mere illusion. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi

- 2011
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- 2006
- R
- Add El Carnaval de Sodoma to Queue
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In this black comedy, master Mexican director Arturo Ripstein (The Holy Office, Deep Crimson) presents another of his trademark looks at the twin forces of absurdity and pathos. Based on a novel by Pedro Antonio Valdez, the film weaves five episodic tales centered around a decrepit Mexican brothel run by a Chinese immigrant, Chang (Samuel Gallegos), and protested nightly by a Christian group who hopes to shut it down. Among the cast of characters who populate this modern-day Sodom and Gomorrah are Chang's long-suffering wife, an eccentric stable of hookers, and an especially seedy roster of customers (including corrupt politicians and deranged priests), resulting in a carnivalesque tapestry of the human condition. ~ Sandra Bencic, Rovi
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- 2006
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- 2005
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- 2002
- R
- Add The Crime of Padre Amaro to Queue
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A priest discovers the path of virtue can be steep, and temptation can demand a heavy price, in this controversial drama from Mexico. Father Amaro (Gael Garcia Bernal) is a young Catholic priest whose mentor, the Bishop (Ernesto Gomez Cruz), expects great things from him. However, like all priests, Amaro must first be assigned where he is needed most, which leads him to the small rural community of Los Reyes, where Amaro is to assist Father Benito (Sancho Gracia). To his shock, Amaro discovers Benito is hardly following Holy Law -- he's having an affair with Sanjuanera (Angelica Aragon), a woman who runs a local restaurant, and he's been helping a drug dealer launder his profits in exchange for large donations to the church, which Benito feels is justified as the funds are being used to build a hospital and orphanage for the poor. Amaro is disgusted with Benito's actions, but he soon discovers his own weaknesses when he falls in love with Amelia (Ana Claudia Talancon), Sanjuanera's teenage daughter. As Amelia finds herself falling for Amaro, she breaks off her relationship with Ruben (Andres Montiel), a reporter. Ruben responds by publishing a story which reveals the details of Benito's dealings with the drug dealers; Benito in turn tries to lay the blame at the feet of noble Father Natalio (Damian Alcazar), whose work with local peasants has been wrongly interpreted as supporting armed revolutionary factions. As Amaro tries desperately to distance himself from the growing scandal, he receives shocking news from Amelia when he learns she's pregnant with his child. The Crime of Father Amaro's portrayal of corruption within the Catholic Church led to an outcry from Catholic organizations, both in Mexico and the United States, where they attempted to organize a boycott of the film. However, the tactic failed in Mexico, where the controversy helped to boost ticket sales, making it the highest-grossing Mexican film ever in its native country. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Gael García Bernal, Sancho Gracia, (more)

- 2002
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- Add La Virgen de la lujuria to Queue
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Legendary Mexican director Arturo Ripstein explores the mundane and sexual obsession in 1940s Mexico in his 2002 film The Virgin of Lust. Introverted Ignacio "Nacho" Jurado (Luis Felipe Tovar) spends his days waiting tables at the Cafe Ofelia and his nights amongst his voluminous porno collection. His world is turned upside-down when a prostitute named Lola (Ariadne Gil) begins hanging out at the cafe. Nacho is immediately smitten with the whore, but Lola's mind is focused on a very brutish wrestler who'll have nothing to do with her. Lola, a natural sadist, recognizes Nacho's penchant for being dominated and she begins to fully exploit this chance to unleash her cruelty on a willing recipient. As the relationship settles into its regular perverseness, Nacho is presented with what he sees as an opportunity to capture Lola's heart completely -- to become a macho revolutionary hero by assassinating Francisco Franco. The Virgin of Lust was chosen for inclusion into the Upstream program at the 2002 Montreal World Film Festival, winning a Special Mention prize from that program's jury. ~ Ryan Shriver, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Luis Felipe Tovar, Ariadna Gil, (more)

- 2001
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- 2000
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- Add Así es la vida to Queue
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Using digital video and a skeleton crew, master filmmaker Arturo Ripstein boldly reworks the ancient Greek drama Medea, employing a dizzying array of flashbacks and Brechtian devices. The film focuses on Julia (Arcelia Ramirez) who works as an homeopathic doctor. Lovelorn and embittered, she learns that her husband, a failed boxer named Nicolas, has dumped her in favor of a younger woman, Raquel (Francesca Guillen), the daughter of local slumlord La Marrana (Ernesto Yanez). To make matters worse, Nicolas wants to take the kids, while at the same time La Marrana evicts Julia from her modest abode. Julia's growing thirst for vengeance is furthered by her godmother who believes that all men should be castrated. This film was screened at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Arcelia Ramirez, Luis Felipe Tovar, (more)

- 2000
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- Add La Perdición de los hombres to Queue
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Arturo Ripstein's black comedy takes its title from a Mexican song about women as the downfall of men. Partitioned into four long scenes, the first sees a badly executed murder in which two killers ambush their victim, stone him to death, and use his wheelbarrow to tow away the body. The film then shifts its location to a crumbling police station where the wives of the bigamous murder victim have come to detail their grievances against their departed husband, and also to lay claim to his body. Eventually a coin is flipped to determine who will get the corpse, but the winner (Patricia Reyes Spindola, a Ripstein regular) starts to feel suckered by the other wives once funeral costs pile up. After a good deal of ranting to her oblivious, Nintendo-fixated daughter, the widow unwittingly enlists the help of one of the killers to transport her husband's body home. En route, she realizes the killer is wearing her husband's boots and duly attacks him with a baseball bat, taking back the boots and forcing the shoeless murderer to suck her toes in penance as her daughter looks on in disgust. The film then flashes back to the two days preceding the murder, when the dead man played on a losing baseball team with his killers; thus is revealed the true reason for his murder. La Perdicion de Los Hombres premiered at the 2000 San Sebastian Film Festival, where it won the festival's Golden Shell for "Best Film." ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Patricia Reyes Spindola, Rafael Inclán, (more)

- 1999
- NR
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Based on the novel of Gabriel Garcia Marquez by the same name, but set in the forties, the film is a reflection on life and its illusions by the Mexican master Arturo Ripstein. In a small coastal town in Mexico in the late 1940's, an obstinate colonel of the anticlerical Cristeros War keeps waiting for the pension that has been promised to him but never delivered. Every Friday, he goes down to the docks, dressed in his best suit in anticipation of the arrival of the letter announcing his pension. Everyone knows that he is waiting in vain, but he refuses to face reality, even though, deep in his heart, he knows that the letter will never arrive. His wife is suffering from asthma; their son Agustin was killed by the fascists; and the roof over their head will soon be taken away because of the unpaid mortgage. Yet the Colonel stands by his dream, refusing to give up despite poverty and hunger. He knows that if he lets go, there is nothing else left. His wife Lola proposes to sell the cock, which is the only thing left behind from their son. But the Colonel does not want to give up the fighting cock, which he believes will win one day. The story is rendered in a simple and straightforward narrative style unlike Ripstein's earlier work, which is more baroque, or Marquez's magical realist style. Repeated close-ups accentuate the damages of a long and hopeless wait on a person's inner strength. Veteran Fernando Lujan is remarkable as the Colonel, but Spanish Marisa Paredes shines as the wife who suffers in dignity. Salma Hayek has a brief appearance as the prostitute who had a relationship with Agustin. In competition at the 52nd Cannes Film Festival, 1999. ~ Gönül Dönmez-Colin, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Fernando Luján, Marisa Paredes, (more)

- 1998
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- Add El Evangelio De Las Maravillas to Queue
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Mexican director Arturo Ripstein helmed this Mexican-Argentine-Spanish religious drama with Buñuelian overtones. Based on true events that took place in Mexico during the '70s, the film is updated to the present. Mama Dorita (Katy Jurado) leads the New Jerusalem cult with film-buff Papa Basilio (Francisco Rabal). Basilio's worship of movies explains the cult's costumes, imitative of Hollywood Biblical epics. When Dorita dies, she chooses teen Tomasa (Edwarda Gurrola) to give birth to the New Messiah. Unable to handle this sudden power, Tomasa instead proclaims herself to be the Whore of Babylon, forcing male cultists to have sex with her. Shown in the Certain Regard section at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Francisco Rabal, Katy Jurado, (more)

- 1996
- NR
- Add Deep Crimson to Queue
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Noted Mexican filmmaker Arturo Ripstein directed this darkly comic drama of love and murder. Coral Fabre (Regina Orozco) is an overweight, emotionally unstable nurse raising two children on her own. Coral is desperately lonely, and through a "Lonely Hearts" club, she begins corresponding with Nicolas Estrella (Daniel Gimenez Cacho). When Coral finally meets Nicolas, she decides that he resembles her favorite actor, Charles Boyer (at least when he wears his toupee) -- and is convinced that they were destined to be together. The fact that Nicolas stole Coral's money after spending the night together does nothing to dissuade her; she learns that Nicolas makes his living by finding rich women and, using his charm, taking their savings before abandoning them. Leaving her children with an orphanage, Coral joins Nicolas as his lover and partner in crime, posing as his sister as he continues his work. Nicolas finds Coral's passion for him exciting, but their amour fou turns deadly when Coral's all-consuming jealousy leads her to murder Nicolas' victims. Profundo Carmesi was based on the true story of American multiple murderers Martha Beck and Raymond Fernandez, which also inspired the film The Honeymoon Killers (1969). ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Regina Orozco, Daniel Jiménez Cacho, (more)

- 1994
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The legendary life of Mexican singer Lucha Reyes is the basis of this fictionalized biography ( or as director Arturo Ripstein puts it "an imaginary biography"). Lucha Reyes was an unconventional, and sexually liberated woman, most famous for her "cancion ranchera" style singing. Her story begins in 1939, where at 33 she still lived at home with her mother, Dona Victora, the madame of a renowned Mexico City whorehouse. Lucha marries the liberal Pedro Calderon and then buys a beggar's daughter. She becomes the mother to this child, Luzma. Lucha craves lasting love like junkies crave heroin. But for her loyal daughter, she never finds it and in the end no one can help her. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Patricia Reyes Spindola, Alberto Estrella, (more)

- 1994
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This Mexican film, loosely based on Egyptian author Naguib Mahfouz's 1940's book, traces the slow and painful collapse of a Mexican family after the sudden death of the father. Much of the film focuses upon the outcomes of two disparate brothers. Following his death, the formerly middle-class Botero family is left destitute. To pay their debts, the mother Ignacia throws the oldest son Guama who does not pull his weight at home, out into the street where he becomes a full-time drug addict, pimp, and bouncer. Guama is doomed right from the start. Ignacia then forces Nicolas and sister, Mireya to give up their bright futures in favor of brother, Gabriel, Ignacia's favorite. The selfish Gabriel is a law student and Ignacia has placed all the family's hopes upon him. Nicolas must leave school and take a peon's job. Mireya works at a sweat-shop and eventually becomes a hooker. Gabriel gets himself into a situation that jeopardizes his potential career. To protect it he cons one of siblings into covering for him. That sibling commits suicide. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Ernesto Laguardia, Julieta Egurrola, (more)

- 1991
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Even with careful handling, this sordid story based on a tale by the famed French writer Guy de Maupassant might repel would-be viewers, but add in scatology and high-blown philosophical maunderings by the lead characters, and you have a recipe for a cinematic disaster. In the story, a sailor has grown tired of his oceangoing life, so he leaves his ship on the sly and beds down in a local Mexican whorehouse. He is startled to discover that his own mother is the house's madam, and that his sister is one of the girls. However, after his sister turns a trick or two with him, he begins to fall in love with her. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Patricia Reyes Spindola, Alejandro Parodi, (more)

- 1989
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Alonso Echanove tops the cast of Mentiras Piadosas as a Mexican grocer and family man. The poor grocer has grown weary of his responsibilities, both on the job and at home. His life is turned around when he meets a pretty health inspector (Delio Casanova). As luck would have, the woman is likewise disenchanted with her lot in life. Love blooms, and never mind who gets hurt in the process. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Delia Casanova, Alonso Echanove, (more)

- 1986
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- Add Imperio De La Fortuna to Queue
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Dull-witted Mexican peasant Ernesto Gomez Cruz comes into possession of a rooster severely injured in a cockfight. He restores the bird's health and wins several bouts, then runs afoul of gambler Alejandro Parodi, who has the rooster's ribs cracked so it can never win again. Taking Cruz under his wing, the gambler teaches the peasant how to be tops in the speculating field. In the company of Parodi's girlfriend Blanca Guerra, who functions as a human good-luck charm, Cruz becomes successful, but Guerra tires of living in Cruz's shadow and kills herself. More than a little influenced by Luis Bunuel, the Mexican Realm of Fortune (El Imperio De La Fortuna) won several awards in its country of origin, though it has only fitfully seen the light of day in the US. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Ernesto Gómez Cruz, Blanca Guerra, (more)

- 1985
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In one of the more intentionally and unintentionally confusing films to come out of the directorial career of auteur Arturo Ripstein, El Otro is something else, so to speak. The film is set in the late 1940s or early '50s and told as one partially surreal story within another, and clues to unraveling the gist of the events do not come until the end. It starts when a father gets a letter from his son Armando (Rafael Sanchez-Navarro) saying that he does not want to see his family anymore. Upset, the father sends a friend, Tavares (Ignacio Lopez Tarso) to go to Armando's hacienda and check him out. On the train to the hacienda, Tavares watches an argument between a young woman and a man named Luis, and then the woman rushes into his compartment, they talk, he falls asleep, and she disappears. Once Tavares reaches the hacienda, he finds a journal written by Armando's friend Luis that describes the last several weeks. It turns out Luis did not write the journal, Armando wrote it as though he were Luis. As the events in the journal begin to unfold in flashbacks, Tavares and the audience both try to piece things together.
~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Rafael Sanchez Navarro, Juan Ignacio Aranda, (more)

- 1981
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- 1980
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- 1980
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- 1979
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A middle-class family makes room for an elderly houseguest, only to discover her presence opens the door for evil in this atmospheric tale of terror. Aunt Alejandra (Isabela Corona) is an elderly woman who relocates to Mexico City and informs her nephew that she's moving in with him. The nephew agrees, despite the fact he and his family are struggling financially and Alejandra is well off enough to easily support herself. Relations between Aunt Alejandra and the family soon become strained, but no one in the family is aware of her secret -- she's a witch and soon uses her powers to take revenge against the children of the household. As the mother and father find their lives torn apart by the death of three of their children, they discover that their youngest daughter seems to have learned a few tricks from her aunt. La Tia Alejandra was directed by noted Mexican producer/director Arturo Ripstein, whose previous terror films have included Profundo Carmesí and El Castillo de la Pureza. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- 1977
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