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Title: Once Upon A Time In Mexico: UMD-Video For PSP
Region: One
Genre: Action
Stars: Antonio Banderas, Salma Hayek, Johnny Depp, Micky Rourke, Eva Mendes, Danny Trejo, Enrique Iglesias, Marco Leonardi, Cheech Marin, Ruben Blades, and Willem Dafoe
Writer: Robert Rodriguez
Director: Robert Rodriguez
Feature length: 102 minutes
Languages:
English and French Language Dubbed Stereo Sound
Subtitles: English, Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean, and Thai Language Subtitles
Packaging: Keep Case
Chapter Stops: 33
Sound: Stereo Sound
Year of Theatrical Release: 2003/UMD Release: 2005
Theatrical Distributor: Columbia Pictures
Home Video Distributor: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
MPAA Rating: R
Reviewer: Mark A. Rivera
“Once Upon A Time In Mexico” is the third entry in Robert Rodriguez’s “El Mariachi Trilogy.” Seven years have past since the events that occurred in “Desperado” and El Mariachi (Antonio Banderas) has been living a life of solitude in a small Mexican town that specializes in making guitars. He mourns the loss of his wife (Salma Hayek) and daughter to a corrupt general and has a price on his head from the drug cartels because of the events of the previous films. El Mariachi is hired by a corrupt CIA operative named Sands (Johnny Depp) to dispose of the same general that murdered his wife and child before the general leads a military coup against the Mexican President. So he gathers the two surviving members of his guitar playing mercenary gang to assist him in protecting the President and avenging his wife’s and daughter’s deaths. However nothing is quite what it seems. Behind the general’s military plans is a drug kingpin (Willem Dafoe), who hopes to have the President assassinated so he can retire under a new identity quietly. Also on the case is a retired FBI agent (Rubin Blades), who wants to take down the drug lord because he had his partner tortured and killed. Soon new alliances are formed as double-crosses entrap El Mariachi into a war that could hold the future of Mexico in the balance.
“Once Upon A Time In Mexico” is the most polished looking film in the series with a more ambitious storyline. The film was shot using High Definition cameras so Rodriguez was open to experiment more with the actors and action resulting in a film that has a freewheeling quality to it. Like he did in “Pirates Of The Caribbean: The Curse Of The Black Pearl,” Johnny Depp takes a side character villain and turns him into an antihero that you just don’t want to see go down. He is terrific and is generous enough with the scenes he shares with the rest of the cast so that they all shine a bit brighter when they are onscreen with him. Willem Dafoe does a nice job as the drug lord while Mickey Rourke succeeds in pulling off a great supporting character as Dafoe’s right hand man with a conscience that can no longer stand the killing around him. Rodriguez film alumni Danny Trejo and Cheech Marin add character to the film too.
Once Upon A Time In Mexico” is one of the best-looking UMD titles available of. Although the film was presented theatrically in a (2.35:1) aspect ratio, that exhibition was actually matted from the original anamorphic widescreen (1.78:1) aspect ratio in which the film was shot. So UMD-Video users actually get to see more on their video screens than those who saw it in the theater without compromising Rodriguez’s vision since while he wanted the film to be ultra wide theatrically to enhance the film’s more epic qualities for home video he wanted to show the film as he shot it. Some might find that decision upsetting, but since we are not losing any screen information and the shots were framed for HDTV anyway, I figure this might actually work better for home video, especially for those who have small monitors like PSP users.
The
English Stereo Soundtrack discrete and well mixed. A French Language Dubbed
Stereo Soundtrack and English, Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean, and Thai
Language Subtitles are also encoded onto the UMD-Video as options. Bonus
preview trailers for “The Grudge”, “Resident Evil: Apocalypse”, and
“Boogeyman” are provided too. The interactive menus are well rendered and
easy to navigate.
“Once Upon A Time In Mexico” is available on UMD-Video now for the PSP at retailers on and offline courtesy of Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
©
Copyright 2005 By Mark A. Rivera
All Rights Reserved.

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