Herod's Law
Mexico, 1949. The fable of a janitor turned Mayor on a little town lost in the Mexican desert, who gradually realizes how far his new acquainted power and corruption can get him.
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- Cast:
- Damián Alcázar , Pedro Armendáriz Jr. , Delia Casanova , Juan Carlos Colombo , Isela Vega , Ernesto Gómez Cruz , Alex Cox
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The biggest problem with this movie is it’s a little better than you think it might be, which somehow makes it worse. As in, it takes itself a bit too seriously, which makes most of the movie feel kind of dull.
The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.
If you want to understand La Ley De Herodes you need to be aware of what the PRI was really on Mexico. First of all it began as a Party that unified the state after our famous and violent revolution the PRI unified Mexico, it started as a good cause but with time it degraded and became what we could see in the movie. At that time, I mean 1940 the Miguel Aleman period there wasn't a Party or force that opposite the PRI, because they control everyone, but they control everyone because they on their side the workers and peasants, because they supported them on their works allowing them to have their syndicates and supporting their demands. Now thats why I think we cant just go like "yes I think that La Ley De Herodes reflects perfectly how the PRI was" I repeat we have to understand the historical contest so that we can make an objective opinion.
A movie where the main character can be a law abiding citizen one minute and a very corrupt politician the next.I was very impressed with the main character's versatile personality. A strugler that could mine gold from a barren place.Even when the political view is the main point in the movie, there are other factors that dominate the events. Against many adversities this industrious character will find a way. Even if it means breaking his own promises. At the end the movie teach that survival is the esential part of life. Even for politicians, corrupts or not corrupts.
I loved this movie! It is a creative and imaginative way of describing the mexican political life the PRI has brought to Mexico for the past 71 years.I must see for any Mexican and anyone interested in Mexican politics.
I first heard about this film on NPR in an interesting program about the ruckus this film may have caused with with it's own government. This lively film pulls a number of punches at politics of this era. A sharp and amusing black political comedy that keeps you engaged from the very beginning. A lowly civil servant gets a "promotion" to become the law in a desolate backwater Mexican village. It is a universal tale of greed, corruption and fate which had me chuckling for hours. If you can imagine a tasty, spicy satire pie baked up with treachery, a wry wit and superb performances, then by all means take of big bite of this delicious treat.