SummaryThis film follows a bright, gutsy young woman on a life-changing -- and life-threatening -- odyssey from Colombia to New York, weaving a gripping narrative of risk, determination and survival. (Fine Line Features)
SummaryThis film follows a bright, gutsy young woman on a life-changing -- and life-threatening -- odyssey from Colombia to New York, weaving a gripping narrative of risk, determination and survival. (Fine Line Features)
Sustains a documentary authenticity that is as astonishing as it is offhand. Even when you're on the edge of your seat, it never sacrifices a calm, clear-sighted humanity for the sake of melodrama or cheap moralizing.
This movie is itself a travel. A cold and smart travel through wonderful landscapes, magic interpretations and a though theme which was perfectly aborded. One of my best "accidents".
What we come to care most about in writer-director Joshua Marston's film is how his heroine achieves the state promised by his title, Maria Full of Grace. Our emotional investment in her derives primarily from the astonishing performance of Moreno, 23.
The whole movie, of course, is a setting for its jewel, Catalina Sandino Moreno as Maria: With her clear, round eyes, long dark hair, and radiant transparency, she brings to mind two of the loveliest ingénues of the last quarter-century -- Meg Tilly and Jennifer Connelly.
Accomplishes two great things on what was undoubtedly a minuscule budget. It breathes life into a small story that has larger ramifications. It also shows that America, as represented by Jackson Heights, is still the promised land for people about whom movies are rarely made.
Not for anyone with a sensitive gag reflex. Joshua Marston provides a harrowing depiction of drug- muling for dummies. The raw, revolting, dangerous details of such an undertaking are graphic.
I was curious to see this film for two reasons in particular: the first was because it was spoken in Spanish and, even so, it had so many admirers within the English-speaking public. That is, for having overcome the linguistic and cultural barrier that, many times, blocks European, Asian and South American productions. The second reason was the general theme of the film: the drug couriers, a more than sufficient premise for a good dramatic film.
The script is really good: in the middle of a rural village in Colombia, which depends almost entirely on large intensive rose plantations for export, a young girl named María, still underage, has just lost her job and discovers she is pregnant with a boy he doesn't even really like. In order to help with the family economy (it's a big family, mostly female), she decides to go to the capital, Bogotá, to look for a better job. On the way, however, she ends up seduced by Franklin, a young man who promises her easy money if she agrees to ingest drug capsules and smuggle them to the United States.
With this story, we are presented with a series of pertinent problems, which are almost transversal to all of Latin America: drug trafficking and the way in which innocent but desperate people are used in this business, sometimes with threats to their families; the way minors are exploited at work, and the way they accept this to help their parents and families, even dropping out of school; the breakdown of families, with abandoned single mothers (even minors), teenage marriages and the ignorance (or neglect) of parents regarding their children's sex lives and the practice of safe sex; in short, it is the social portrait of a poor Latin America, dependent on the richest countries, and where not even religion is able to help maintain some morals and family values. It's a scenario I know from having friends in this region of the world, and the film managed to transport to the screen very well.
Catalina Moreno is a young Colombian actress that I really enjoyed discovering and hope to see in more work in the future. She was happy in her effort to give life to a naturally kind and naive protagonist, and she captures our sympathy with the way she untangles herself from problems, with a courage and capacity for initiative superior to her age. The rest of the cast doesn't do more than help her in her task, and the only one who really deserves a praise for her job is Yenni Paola Vega, in the role of a friend with whom María maintains a difficult and troubled relationship, but to those who do not deny help.
Technically, the movie is pretty good. Discreet cinematography takes advantage of the best of South American scenery and landscapes, providing us with good colors and a pleasant contrast. The entire film exudes verisimilitude, credibility, authenticity, and almost makes us forget that it's just fiction. The film has an excellent editing and the duration is short, as it leaves us wanting to see something else.
Don't listen to the shameful users here. They know nothing about movies. On other sites, Maria Full of Grace has a positive user score such as Rotten Tomatoes and IMDb, but in here, they screwed it up. Maria Full of Grace is fulled with grace... every single second of it... it ends wanting more from the viewer!
One the best films from Colombia, together with "Our Lady of the Assassins" or "The Little Roses Girl". Great début for Catalina Sandino. It's truth all about tragic destiny to these South American girls. Great film!
This movie is alright but it is nothing spectacular or riveting. The main actress is an unknown actress not an A list actress. Also the storyline of the movie is univolving when it is supposed to be involving. Trainspotting and Requiem For A Dream can be compared to this movie. However both of those movies are ingeniously structured, realistic and unique in their visions. 87 for a score on this site was ridiculous for this movie. I watched this movie once after buying the movie, then I discarded the DVD. I wouldn't watch this movie again because it has no popular actors and the movie is subtitled with the actors speaking in Spanish. It is very agitating to watch a movie in Spanish when you want the actors to be speaking English. If this movie was an American release with talented actors this would have been a masterpiece. This movie is no masterpiece, it isn't even a passable movie on the 1 to 10 scale. Requiem should have had an 87 score because the movie is flawless without a single moment or idea squandered, ditto for Trainspotting.