Once Upon a Time in Mexico
Once Upon a Time in Mexico (2003)

Once Upon a Time in Mexico

1/5
(15 votos)
6.4IMDb56Metascore

Detalles

Elenco

Errores

When Agent Sands is checking Belini's body for the information he needs, Belini's "corpse" is breathing.

When Agent Sands is checking Belini's body for the information he needs, Sands cigarette changes length from shot to shot.

At the bullfight, a cameraman is reflected in Sands' sunglasses.

When Sands first meets the bubblegum-selling boy, the shots of the boy have been flipped - the writing on the pack is backwards.

When Agent Sands is being tailed by the cartel hit-man, you can see the small pistol in his hand before he pulls it out of his trousers.

The chain tying El and Carolina together is removed with an electric wire feed welder (used for welding) and not a blowtorch (used for cutting), removing the links closest to the cuffs.

When it falls to the ground, it is whole again.

During the opening gunfight, when El Mariachi spins his gun and points it at Marquez it is an automatic.

In the next shot, it is a revolver.

When Fideo arms the mobile bomb in the guitar case, he closes the lid.

The next shot shows the lid still open as he stands up and sends the bomb on its way.

The next shot shows the bomb with the lid closed as it moves towards its target.

Bullet holes are missing from the roof of the bus when El Mariachi and Carolina run across it, just before it collides with the tanker truck.

As El Mariachi plays the opening theme, his guitar suddenly acquires a braided strap.

When El and Carolina are about to jump from the window, Carolina's leg is dangling over the edge of the windowsill.

In the next shot, just as she's about to jump, her foot is up on the sill.

In the final shootout scene, at the presidential palace, after the general is shot, in both knees and then in the head, he moves his left foot to allow the drug lord to pass by.

Before the guitar maker presents his work to El Mariachi, he is shown playing it left-handed.

In the next shot, he is strumming right-handed.

Then, as he hands it over to El, it is positioned as if he had just been playing left-handed again.

Just after Sands eyes have been removed and he emerges from the building, his hair flips between being behind his ears and then loose several times.

In the opening scene, after Belini leaves the bar, Sands is seen taking off his fake arm with the yellowish piece of paper on the table in front of him containing the information given to him by Belini.

The shot then shows Sands putting his fake arm in the bag, and when the next shot cuts back, the paper is missing from the table.

When Sands gets shot in the arm toward the end, the squib is clearly visible.

When Sands takes off his jacket after being shot in the arm, there is no bullet wound.

Later, a bullet wound appears on his arm.

When Jorge uses white out to cover the INVALID stamp on his FBI badge, it is a sloppy job that will pass only the most casual inspection.

Later, when he flashes the badge to Billy it looks perfect with no indication of alteration.

However if you look carefully you can see the white "INVALID" writing on the badge.

When Ajedrez subsequently has the badge, the white out is once again very visible.

In the Bar Shootout at the start, El has a 1911 (a semi-automatic pistol) but when he points it at the generals head, it's changed to a Colt Python (a revolver).

When Lorenzo is practicing shooting, he takes his brother's bottle of alcohol and places it on the wall to shoot.

The drunk picks the bottle up, and while he holds it, Lorenzo shoots it.

They cut away to show Lorenzo, and when they cut back to the brother holding the bottle, the bottle has broken differently, and had a label.

After Sands shoots at the cartel hit-man with his small pistol (and misses), the gun is clearly empty when he says 'Was that my right or your right?' he then shoots again without reloading.

As El Mariachi shoots at the thugs in the church, as he backs down the center aisle, squibs continue to go off behind the thugs even after El stops firing.

El, Lorenzo, and Frideo are standing outside the church before going to preform for the president, El has a white ribbon tied in his hair, but when he walks into the church it's gone.

A few moments later when the are on the roof his hair is up, then cut to Lorenzo and then back to El and his hair is down.

The Gun that Ajedrez uses is a revolver with a silencer, but revolvers can not be silenced.

The president wears the sash over his suit.

The only time the president of Mexico wears the sash over his suit is when he is sworn into office.

When El shoots out the general's legs, you can clearly hear two shots, meaning his gun should be empty as it is a double barrel.

However, he then walks up to the general and shoots him in the head without reloading.

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
26 October 2003 USA USD 55,845,943
19 October 2003 USA USD 55,677,591
12 October 2003 USA USD 55,010,855
5 October 2003 USA USD 53,068,097
28 September 2003 USA USD 48,967,404
21 September 2003 USA USD 40,951,922
14 September 2003 USA USD 23,424,118
USA USD 56,359,780
19 October 2003 UK GBP 2,560,141
12 October 2003 UK GBP 2,364,423
5 October 2003 UK GBP 1,827,112
28 September 2003 UK GBP 846,100
24 November 2004 Worldwide USD 41,825,802
worldwide USD 98,185,582
Non-USA USD 41,825,802
1 January 2004 Finland USD 144,891
25 December 2003 Finland USD 115,908
18 December 2003 Finland USD 100,465
11 December 2003 Finland USD 61,098
15 December 2003 Italy EUR 4,032,114
7 December 2003 Italy EUR 3,496,030
30 November 2003 Italy EUR 2,795,500
23 November 2003 Italy EUR 1,511,156
10 March 2004 Netherlands EUR 901,977
2 November 2003 Spain EUR 2,387,217
26 October 2003 Spain EUR 1,937,712
19 October 2003 Spain EUR 1,159,192
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
14 September 2003 USA USD 23,424,118 3,282
28 September 2003 UK GBP 846,100 313
27 February 2004 Australia USD 1,125,944 199
26 September 2003 Austria USD 242,211
7 November 2003 Brazil USD 230,679 182
26 September 2003 Europe USD 2,451,283 717
11 December 2003 Finland USD 61,098 12
5 December 2003 Finland USD 32,090
24 October 2003 France USD 1,343,562
26 September 2003 Germany USD 1,003,307
24 October 2003 Hong Kong USD 71,415 20
26 September 2003 Iceland USD 5,623
23 November 2003 Italy EUR 1,509,475 283
5 March 2004 Japan USD 668,678 41
8 February 2004 Netherlands EUR 248,572 61
21 November 2003 Norway USD 92,571
16 January 2004 South Africa USD 64,521 43
19 October 2003 Spain EUR 1,159,192 300
17 October 2003 Sweden USD 85,245
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
26 October 2003 USA USD 85,053 114
19 October 2003 USA USD 275,780 288
12 October 2003 USA USD 1,065,247 1,131
5 October 2003 USA USD 2,626,304 2,097
28 September 2003 USA USD 5,004,233 2,922
21 September 2003 USA USD 11,007,367 3,289
14 September 2003 USA USD 23,424,118 3,282
19 October 2003 UK GBP 61,622 105
12 October 2003 UK GBP 258,450 233
5 October 2003 UK GBP 532,327 315
28 September 2003 UK GBP 846,100 313
1 January 2004 Finland USD 28,983 7
25 December 2003 Finland USD 15,443 7
18 December 2003 Finland USD 39,367 12
11 December 2003 Finland USD 61,098 12
15 December 2003 Italy EUR 260,014 140
7 December 2003 Italy EUR 478,820 202
30 November 2003 Italy EUR 778,573 282
8 February 2004 Netherlands EUR 248,572
2 November 2003 Spain EUR 337,793 290
26 October 2003 Spain EUR 539,150 300
19 October 2003 Spain EUR 1,159,192 300

Comentarios

"Leaping back into action, gun-slinging, guitar-toting hero 'El Mariachi' is back in town in 'Once Upon a Time in Mexico', as director Robert Rodriquez delivers the epic final chapter of his pulp western trilogy. Starring Antonio Banderas, Salma Hayek, Johnny Depp, Mickey Rourke, Eva Mendes, Enrique Iglesias, and Willem Dafoe, 'Once Upon a Time in Mexico' is a full-frontal assault," according to the DVD sleeve.

So-so. Starts well, builds to a point, and then just falls apart.

The stoty takes off from and rehashes the second film with flashbacks including Salma Hayek , here El Mariachi (Antonio Banderas) becomes involved in a twisted international intrigue involving a lot of strange characters such as : a crooked CIA agent called Sands (Johnny Depp) , a nasty mexican General , a corrupt cop (Eva Mendes) . Meanwhile ,a drug baron (Willem Defoe) is attempting to assassinate the President (Pedro Armendariz Jr) by a complex conspiracy .

I am confused. There are too many main characters which are hard to follow.

"Once Upon a Time in Mexico" is a thrilled movie full of action, the legendary El Mariachi (Antonio Banderas) seeks revenge while at the same time he needs to help the C.I.

Still good fun and some iconic imagery! This time El, suffering personal tragedy of his own, is recruited by CIA Agent Sands (Johnny Depp) to take down a gang leader attempting to corrupt the Mexican president.

The problem with Rodriguez's Mariachi trilogy is it's not so much a thematic trilogy exploring different aspects of a basic concept or telling a story too big to be told in one movie it's just making the same basic movie over and over. By the third movie you feel like you've seen it all before, only last time you saw it it wasn't quite this confusing.

This sequel to the "El Mariachi" story is surely fine and dandy. Antonio Banderas has done it again!

Rodriguez should let go of this mariachi story line now (maybe he has I'm not familiar with his more recent output). The image of the wandering guitar player--the mariachi-- harking back to the days of the medieval troubadours has a certain amount of wistful charm.

Comentarios