• LAT Home
  • |
  • My LATimes
  • |
  • Print Edition
  • |
  • All Sections
  • More Classifieds
  • |
  • Foreclosure Sale
  • |
  • Real Estate
  • |
  • Cars.com
  • |
  • Jobs
Los Angeles Times The Guide

Search LATimes

  • Restaurants
  • Bars & Clubs
  • Events
  • Music
  • Art & Museums
  • Theater & Stage
  • Outdoors
  • Movies
  • TV
  • Neighborhoods
 
calendarlive

Movies

In Movies

  • Movie Reviews
  • Movie News

Partners

Classifieds

  • Careers
  • Cars
  • Homes
  • Rentals
  • Times Guides
  • Newspaper Ads
  • Grocery Coupons
  • Personals

August 20, 2004 E-mail story   Print  

MOVIE REVIEW

'Nicotina'

Fate is up in smoke in this heist gone wrong.
 
Bad company
Bad company
(Arenas Entertainment)

Find Movie Showtimes & Tickets
Search by Title:
OR
By Zip Code:

Reader Reviews
-Forever Strong
-The New Twenty
-Boogie Man: The Lee Atwater Story
-Shoot on Sight
-Hounddog
-Garden Party

Times Reviews
-'District 13: Ultimatum' is a showcase for stunts, which isn't a bad thing
-Brit Noir series to start at Nuart on Friday
-Review: 'Dear John'
-'From Paris With Love'
-'The Last Station'
-Mo'Nique won't hit the campaign trail
-'Fish Tank' is an elegy on teen poverty and desperation
-'Edge of Darkness'
-'A Town Called Panic'
-'Saint John of Las Vegas' veers off the road despite Steve Buscemi
-'When in Rome'
-'When in Rome' info


 Movie Reviews
'District 13: Ultimatum' is a showcase for stunts, which isn't a bad thing
Brit Noir series to start at Nuart on Friday
Review: 'Dear John'
'From Paris With Love'
'The Last Station'
Movie Reviews section >

 Most E-mailed
'Crazy Heart'
'Crash'
'Up in the Air'
> more e-mailed stories

By Carina Chocano, Times Staff Writer

Theaters, showtimes, buy tickets online

In 'Nicotina,' chaos intersects flawed yet star-crossed lives in a Mexican heist. How dark is "Nicotina"? According to producer Martha Sosa, it's "the darkest, darkest part of the cigarette." But the cool, stylish Mexican heist-gone-wrong comedy is darker than that and even more hazardous to its characters' health.

Occasionally using split screens and other buttons on the Avid editor to modish, generally unobtrusive effect, the movie follows four sets of characters whose destinies get tangled during the course of an uncomplicated criminal transaction. The action transpires (more or less) in real time over an hour and a half in Mexico City one night. Lolo (Diego Luna), a blinkered computer hacker, has agreed to provide his friend Nene (Lucas Crespi) and Nene's older partner Tomson (Jesús Ochoa) with access to a series of Swiss bank accounts, whereupon Nene and Tomson will hand off the accounts to a pair of Russian mobsters in exchange for a stash of diamonds.

ADVERTISEMENT
Lolo, however, is nursing a mad crush on his neighbor, Andrea (Marta Beláustegui), and he has tricked out her place with a mind-boggling amount of surveillance equipment. Not only does Lolo watch Andrea's every move, he backs up her every move on disk and labels it. Andrea, an ambitious Spanish cellist plotting her triumphant return to a major European symphony orchestra, is a virtuoso of manipulation. She's playing her conductor, her other neighbor, several members of the brass and string sections, and, of course, Lolo like so many large violins. Naturally, she is too self-centered to be aware of Lolo's spying.

His timing is filthy. Lolo downloads the bank information onto a disk without incident, but soon afterward Andrea gets wind of his peeping and flies into a rage, setting off a series of escalating calamities that eventually involve the edgy pharmacist Beto (Daniel Giménez Cacho); his fed-up wife, Clara (Carmen Madrid); an easygoing barber, Goyo (Rafael Inclán) and his shrewish wife, Carmen (Rosa María Bianchi).

Like "Amores Perros" and "Pulp Fiction," to which screenwriter Martín Salinas looked for inspiration, "Nicotina" takes the view that chance and timing are equal to will and intent. Some things are causal, some things are fated, everything, in the end, is random. In an American movie, a Weltanschauung as chaotic as this normally comes with a heaping side of nihilism and a bunch of sneering, sweaty unredeemable types, but "Nicotina" neither condemns nor exalts its characters. Instead, it takes the picaresque view that given the opportunity, people will act in their own self-interest. Those who don't may be dumb or scared, but they're certainly not pure.

Lolo, a surly, lonely cyber-serf with a tendency to blink excessively and mumble nonsensically when he gets excited, is probably the most objectionable of all the characters, yet he's also the most endearing. Bianchi and Inclán are exceptional as a disappointed middle-aged couple barely getting by as barbershop owners. Inclán's Goyo radiates the slightly surprised sadness of a man who might have been content with life if the person by his side didn't remind him how bad it is every five minutes. Bianchi's Carmen is a curdled dreamer who spends too much money on cigarettes and evening classes — she's taken courses in tourism, computers and sushi— with no results. When a big, fat opportunity walks through the door of the barbershop, she jumps on it, and it leads to the film's most outrageously gruesome scene.

Clara and Beto, who run the pharmacy down the street, are about 10 years Carmen and Goyo's juniors and their mirror image. Beto is trying to quit smoking, and it's giving him the perfect excuse to be as mean and controlling as he no doubt is anyway. The dreamy Clara puts up with it by checking out emotionally, until the handsome and mysterious Nene walks in to buy a pack of her favorite brand.

The scenes between Nene and Tomson are the most underdeveloped, as perhaps befit an afterthought. Nene, a young Argentine (his name literally means "kid") clearly playing John Travolta to his partner Tomson's Samuel L. Jackson, uses up all the silence on the way to the delivery calculating lung cancer to hit-by-a-truck ratios. Tomson, who is Mexican and is old enough to be his father, tries to school Nene in the ways of the world and his adoptive country. (Now doesn't necessarily mean right now.) But the smoking-as-metaphor device takes over a bit too neatly, until almost all communication between the partners is swaddled in unnecessary symbolic layers. (Besides, the logic is flawed — fate and free will are not mutually exclusive. All the smoking in the world won't prevent death by Mack truck.)

Still, for a movie in which almost everybody smokes, lives with a smoker or is trying to quit, "Nicotina" is refreshingly free of noxious additives. There are no added morals here, no squeaky-clean heroes or Hollywood fundamentalism. Cosmic justice is swift and merciless, but it's neither high-minded nor didactic. In fact, it may not even be justice at all, just coincidence.

"Nicotina's" every loser, criminal, dreamer, crank and cynic is flawed, but their flaws are primal and as human as thumbs. In the end, it's this grim but tender view of humanity that gives the movie its appealing combination of mordant humor and cheerful pessimism.

'Nicotina'

MPAA rating: R for violence and language.

Times guidelines: Violence, gore, lots of smoking.

Diego Luna...Lolo

Rafael Inclán...Goyo

Daniel Giménez Cacho...Beto

Jesús Ochoa...Tomson

Lucas Crespi...Nene

A Cacerola Films/Altavista Films/Videocine production, released by Arenas Entertainment. Director Hugo Rodriguez. Producers Laura Imperiale, Martha Sosa. Executive producers Mónica Lozano, Laura Imperiale, Federico González Compeán, Eckehardt Von Damm. Screenplay Martín Salinas. Director of photography Marcello Iaccarino. Editor Alberto de Toro. Costume designer Alejandra Dorantes. Music Fernando Corona. Art director Sandra Cabriada. Running time: 1 hour, 33 minutes. In general release.





To order a reprint of this article, please click here.

 
 
 

More in The Guide

Restaurants | Bars & Clubs | Events | Music | Art | Performing Arts | Movies | TV |

More on LATimes.com

California/Local | National | World | Sports | Business | Entertainment | Travel | Health | Autos | Real Estate

Classifieds

CareerBuilder.com | Cars.com | Apartments.com | OpenHouses.com | FSBO (For Sale by Owner)

Partners

ViveloHoy | KTLA | Metromix | Zap2it
Los Angeles Times
202 West 1st Street, Los Angeles, California, 90012
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Advertise | Home Delivery | Permissions | Help & Services | Contact | Site Map