Maria Full of Grace

2004 "Based on 10,000 true stories."
7.4| 1h41m| R| en| More Info
Released: 18 January 2004 Released
Producted By: Fine Line Features
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website: http://www.mariallenaeresdegracia.com/index.html
Synopsis

A pregnant Colombian teenager becomes a drug mule to make some desperately needed money for her family.

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Reviews

Smartorhypo Highly Overrated But Still Good
Bea Swanson This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.
Allison Davies The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
Juana what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.
KissEnglishPasto Since the Oscars began in 1927, there have been a total of 420 Oscar nominations in the category of Best Leading Actress. Only 12 have been awarded to actresses in works filmed in languages, other than English. Catalina Sandino Moreno, with her Oscar nomination as best actress in María Llena de Gracia (Maria Full of Grace) was the first Colombian, moreover, the first Spanish-speaking actress, no less, to receive a nomination in this category.In 1960, for the first time, two actresses received nominations in this category for roles in movies filmed other languages: Greek and Italian. Sophia Loren won the Oscar for her role in Two Women. It was the first and, so far, the only time an actress has taken home such a sought-after award for an interpretation realized in a language other than English. The list of nominees reads like a "Who's Who" of famous actresses and recognized by their talent, whose native language is not English:Melina Mercouri for Never on Sunday ('60-Greek), Sophia Loren for Marriage to 'Italian ('64), Ida Kaminska for The Shop on Main St. ('65- Czech), Anouk Aimée for Un Homme et Une Femme (So ​​Sophie Loren and Liv Ullman are the only two actresses to be nominated twice).But there is another interesting category: 19 nominations, in total, for actresses making their film debut. Most of them, like Katherine Hepburn, Julie Andrews and Barbra Striesand, went on to reach "Superstardom"! By carefully reviewing the names in the previous paragraph, you can see that all the above mentioned actresses were already well-known, with long trajectories and many previous films, when the Academy did them the honor of nominating them.Perhaps most interesting aspect of the nomination of Catalina Sandino Moreno is that, for the first time in Oscar History, the nomination for Best Actress had been given to a newcomer, for a role in a film produced in another language! (It's also the first time that the Academy named someone who performed a role in Spanish!) I hope that every Colombian felt a special pride in savoring such important news.However, at the time I thought it prudent not to get all that excited about Ms. Sandino's prospects of winning...And, of course, as it turned out...I was right! Speaking in real terms, the Academy, undoubtedly, considers the simple act of getting a nomination for a role done in another language to be such a great honor, in and of itself, that it decided it would be much better to give the Oscar to another nominee...or, at least, the lack of any other Winner in 50 years certainly gives that impression!I dare, now, offer Ms. Sandino a couple of suggestions! (Hopefully this Review will make it into your hands!) Not too many years ago, you lived your life as 99.99% of people: in total anonymity! Then, I imagine, with the release of Maria Llena Eres de Gracia, there was a dramatic change in your life. In Colombia and with all your ex-patriots, you became an extremely well-known celebrity, with job offers beginning to rain down on you!And Everything accelerated frantically on the Tuesday the Oscar nominations were announced! You must have felt as though you were living in a fish bowl! Under a microscope in front of everyone, with the number of job offers growing rapidly! My humble suggestion: That you look for roles that are totally different role, and try to seek out films that have absolutely nothing to do with drugs or crime!My additional advice ... Well, since I do not know your plans regarding the possibility of making films in English or not, nor have I had the opportunity to hear you speak in English, I do not know if you really speak "a perfect English" as you mentioned in an article written about you in TIME On-Line. What is true in Hollywood is that any actor with a foreign accent which is relatively easy to perceive does not really have many options for any important roles. (With the exception of Arnold Scharzennegger, and to a lesser extent, Jackie Chan and Jean-Claude van Damme)As an example I give you Salma Hayek. Excellent actress, with more than enough English to conduct any press conference with relative ease. But, who, since she has not yet managed to shake off a residual accent, does not seem to be offered any really good roles other than those of a Latina woman. Unfair? Of course! But it is a sad reality. In effect: If you want to work in Hollywood, hopefully, your English must actually reach a native level, or very-near native level!In closing, I have left a topic which may be somewhat difficult for many. I was going to start this review with it, but I decided not to put it first so as not to start on a negative note. As a person who truly values ​​and wants to see Colombia treated fairly on screen, obviously, I would have preferred that the central theme of MARIA been focused on something else! Unfortunately, for too many Americans, upon hearing "Colombia", DRUGS is the first thing that pops into their minds!Certainly, how much better better it would have been, if the nomination had been for a film like "La Estrategia del Caracol"! Well, at least, MARIA seemed intent on showing some of the cruel consequences suffered by some Colombians who get involved in the Drug trade in order to satisfy the seemingly insatiable appetite for illicit drugs demonstrated by people living in the U.S.A.!8*...ENJOY! / DISFRUTELA!Any comments, questions or observations, in English or Español, are most welcome!.....
Python Hyena Maria Full of Grace (2004): Dir: Joshua Marston / Cast: Catalina Sandino Moreno, Yenny Paola Vega, Guilied Lopez, Patricia Rae, John Alex Toro: Powerful and provocative film about taking life for granted. Catalina Sandino Moreno plays teenage Maria who quits her job of preparing roses for bouquets when her pregnancy affects constant job irritations. Her mother is constantly borrowing her money and her boyfriend is irresponsible so she accepts an offer to transport drugs to New York. She must swallow pellet size packages of cocaine and make the trip with two other girls, one of whom meets a dire conclusion that has Maria rethinking her decision. Director Joshua Marston gives full view of drug trafficking sparing no suspense in the process. The message is hard hitting and ugly in how those without financial means and no immediate alternatives, are lured into this lifestyle of crime and destruction. Moreno is brilliant as Maria who takes the ultimate risk, sees its ugliness, then yearns for something more. Great supporting cast including Yenny Paola Vega as her best friend Blanca as well as Guilied Lopez and Patricia Rae. The content is disturbing but counters this by being a well crafted independent film with a talking fish to boot. Themes address foolish risks while ignoring the grace freely given within everything we take for granted. Score: 8 / 10
bbewnylorac As the Colombian drug mule Maria, Catalina Sandino Mareno perfectly portrays an intelligent but naive and impulsive girl who agrees to swallow pellets of drugs and fly to New York for a drug cartel. Joshua Marston's directing, the script and the actors' performances have such passion and empathy that it puts the audience right in their shoes. Yes, the film says, Maria makes an incredibly stupid choice to risk death or heavy punishment in doing this. To some extent she already knows this, but she soon learns all the very nasty consequences. You can feel her fear, of imminent death or arrest. But the film asks us to ask ourselves, what if you were her - facing lifelong poverty and mind numbing work and responsibility for your entire family in a third world country? There is no hope for advancement in life. Would you do the same? You're a pregnant teenager and you meet someone who will pay you a lot of money and take you to the US where everything (you imagine) will be wonderful. Maria's dominant feeling is choking fear, in many forms. It makes you think about the risks and sense of leaping blindly into the unknown that migrants must experience.
ybraunstein Had to watch this for my women studies class. Why, i don't really know, as it doesn't have much to do with gender issues. Anyway, I can't explain the great reviews. Yes, like most people in the third world she lives below the poverty line. Her life is more boring than a struggle. No wonder she wants to escape. However, it's not really an interesting story line. Yes, drug traffic is dangerous, Lucy dies, but otherwise its pretty mundane. No real character development nothing. while we are on that subject, if you hire no names off the street you aren't going to be able to develop interesting characters. There is a reason movies are supposed to include real actors Nuff said