15 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :- Stepping into another world . . ., 2 August 2006
Author:
Chris Docker (eyeforfilm) from Scotland, United Kingdom
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
A corpse being offered another drink, the bloodstained thighs of a
maidenhead lost, dead rats (for luck), three days of religious
celebration when God is dead, and a ritual for the whole village so
secret that a visiting stranger is locked up: these are just some of
the strange, wonderful images that remind us more of the Wicker Man
than modern day Peru. But in a country where many rural areas are still
isolated and barely accessible, where Christianity made its mark more
in name than in spirit, and where the outback life is rarely depicted
in Western cinemas, Madeinusa comes as a shock, a spellbinding insight,
and a refreshingly different fable.
The nearest telephone is a three mile walk to the next village and the
daily grind consists mostly of cultivating enough food to subsist. It
comes as no surprise when Madeinusa, a pretty adolescent, is enamoured
by the suave young man (Salvador) from Lima. He only stops in the
remote Manayaycuna (the town no-one can enter) when the bus refuses to
go any further due to floods. He symbolises everything she dreams the
big city to be - and everything her present life is not. In Manayaycuna
her life is mapped out for her, including arguments with her sister and
the ever-present prospect of institutionalised incest with her father,
the corrupt Mayor. The distant world outside includes things like
pretty shoes and make-up - according to a magazine she once saw - but
no-one would deliver such things as far away as Manayaycuna.
Shortly after Salvador arrives, Madeinusa wins the pageant held to
choose the most Immaculate Virgin. Her heart is warmed by a Polaroid
picture he takes of her. The Rituals that follow are a paganised
version of the days leading up to Easter. An image of Christ is
un-nailed and taken down before the beautifully bedecked virgin kisses
him on the lips. The three days of celebration are marked by fireworks
and festivities. They are the Holy Time, when God is dead, and as
Madeinusa points out to Salvador (while taking some of her clothes
off), this means He can't see any sins.
Madeinusa is a remarkably crafted work from first time filmmaker
Claudia Llosa. Superb camera-work and vibrant colours let her linger on
details without ever boring us. The roughly cobbled streets; the
vegetables and pulses in worn peasant hands preparing them; the bright,
highly intricate costumes; the wide open plains, and the snow capped
mountains: Llosa takes us on a journey into the interior of a country
that few of us will know well, and capitalises on our sense of awe to
weave her fantastic tale. Like Salvador, we are almost voyeurs in a
forbidden world: "The town doesn't want a gringo in Holy Time." The
twists towards the end suggest that when fate hands out justice it may
not be to everyone's liking (it may irritate some who long for
traditional happy resolutions - at least until you think it through),
but Madeinusa is more fable than fairy-tale. If it is too measured for
viewers who prefer a fast paced drama, for those with the patience to
listen it is a rare and slightly unsettling work. Madeinusa has a
feeling of authenticity and dedication to the craft, as well as
heralding a remarkable new talent in Director Claudia Llosa.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- A few word to save Claudia, 7 January 2008
Author:
Carlos Martinez Escalona from Mexico
Claudia Llosa explained many times why she made this film (It doesn't
matter if she IS Peruvian or not... anyway, she IS.
It's not a docuementary. It's not a mockumentary. It's not a portrayal
of reality. It's not a film to raise racial prejudices. It's not a film
abusive of the people portrayed on it.
It's this crazy idea (a script idea that came out of a "dream") of what
would it be like if a town (BTW: Manayaycuna actually means the place
no-one-can-enter and is non-existent) believed that during three days
there's no sin, since "God is dead".
Better approach it with the motto of "it's just a film, it's just a
film"
It's a difficult film to watch, but, nonetheless, a work of fiction, so
don't take it so personal. Some filmmakers in the world, and some
writers -as I do, have found this film remarkable in many aspects.
When I read a comment calling names to whoever chooses to watch this
film just for that decision... well, that person shouldn't be allowed
to post here!
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- The Folk-art children are going to folk you up, 14 March 2008
Author:
Chad Shiira from Mililani, Hawaii
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
"Madeinusa" is the "...Spinal Tap" of ethnographic movies. With its
tongue firmly entrenched in cheek, this Peruvian film may have you
defending incest for an embarrassingly long time. Writer/director
Claudia Llosa knows her audience are culturally-sensitive, global
citizens who wouldn't dream of insisting that a non-western settlement
adopt our own Christian-sanctioned assortment of ideals and mores. When
Cayo(Juan Ubaldo Huaman) jumps in bed with his two daughters(Madeinusa
and Chale), we consider the social context and rationalize this deviant
behavior as being the practices of a society that doesn't place a taboo
on inter-family relationships. Funny thing, though; this Peruvian
backwater IS a god-fearing community. Every year, they pretend he's
dead for three days, literally dead, which means Jesus isn't just magic
for the remaining three-hundred-sixty odd days to these country-folk,
Jesus is alive. The town holds an annual pageant to crown this year's
virgin, and this year, Madeinusa(Magaly Solier), is it. She's quite
literally, a quasi-Christian beauty queen: Miss Dead Jesus. There's
floats. There's fireworks. And most importantly, the people are granted
a weekend-long get-out-of-hell card; without repercussions,
debauchery(wife-swapping, the aforementioned incest) is practiced
without the confinements of moral legislation. Now, at long last,
incest can safely be called perverted, because Cayo does indeed know
that having relations with your own flesh and blood is perverted. When
the wayfaring gringo says that the town is crazy, it gives the audience
permission to throw caution out the window and openly criticize their
primitive inclinations.
Salvador(Carlos J. de la Torre) is a white man from Lima. He's our
repository for western ideas(e.g. incest: a bad idea), the guy who is
willing to call a spade a spade(he thinks the people are crazy; we
concur), which is why his vertical quickie with Madeinusa in the midst
of the communal grab-ass festival, startles us, because the film knows
how men are. Fear of incarceration, sadly, may be the sole reason why
the moral divide between camaraderie and intimacy isn't crossed. With
no stronghold of the law to keep Salvador's libido in check, our
"civilized" man pins Madeinusa to the wall and makes like a piston.
"Madeinusa" is a stinging indictment against organized religion. Think
about Father Oliver O'Grady in "Deliver us from Evil" who violated all
those little boys and girls. These Peruvians(fictionalized Peruvians,
let me make that clear) are honest about the darker side of human
nature. "Madeinusa", cobbled from Stephen King's "Children of the
Corn"(short story, film; either/or) and Shirley Jackson's "The
Lottery", forces us to ask about the state of God each time we sin.
We're all assassins, right? It doesn't take a village.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- The most underestimated independent movie theme/idea of all time!, 6 March 2008
Author:
Victor Camacho (vicc777@hotmail.com) from Mexico City
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
This movie's truly original pitch/premise has so much potential, and I
can't stress enough the words SO MUCH POTENTIAL, that the story Claudia
Llosa chose in the end, although interesting and beautiful in it's own
way, falls short compared to the expectation THAT pitch creates. In
other words, there are so many possibilities regarding human sinful
behavior and how to approach it given this 'sin doesn't exist for like
3 days for some "faithful believers"' idea that one is left wanting to
see the movie from the point of view of 5 or 6 totally different
characters instead.
The movie won like 5 or 6 Best Screenplay awards in different film
festivals besides winning an award at the Mar del Plata film festival
AND being nominated for Best Foreign Film at the Academy Awards, which
says a lot. However, the screenplay is not perfect. There are scenes
which are dull and to be honest, plain dumb; a couple of others
could've been left out without causing a negative effect.
But talking about Madeinusa's positive aspects and artistic value, the
movie's defining moment (and the most memorable one in
"first-time-acting/first-time-directing" independent film making
history, I must say) has got to be Magaly Solier's interpretation of
the song (created by herself, by the way) she sings to Salvador. The
most humble, truly innocent, naive and authentic performance you'll
ever see this side of the world. That scene alone is worth watching a
couple of times and help diminish all those little plot
holes/errors/contradictions that could've been polished to perfection
in Llosa's script.
7 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- worth every accolade, 5 January 2007
Author:
prekkeh from United States
I had the pleasure of seeing this movie on the last night of my first
Peru vacation. The actors inhabited their characters and were very well
defined. Madeinusa, the main character was scary in her "innocent evil"
yet she remained sympathetic throughout the story. I found it hard to
believe she had no previous acting experience. The story was
captivating. It pulled me in from the start and spat me out wanting at
its ending. I'll never look at the period between Good Friday and
Easter Sunday the same way again. The scenery and cinematography was
breathtaking and went a long way to carry the mood of the film.
I can't wait for the US release. This film is a must-see!
9 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :- lots of questions, 11 June 2006
Author:
carla10012002 from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I have spent time traveling in Peru and speak Spanish and found the
portrayal of indigenous life and especially the religious ceremonies
fascinating. I was horrified by the incest and in particular the aunt
who pimped her niece to the father. I don't think Madeinusa fell in
love with the gringo, as one review in the Seattle International Film
Festival said, but that she was in wonder at someone so different. She
seemed slow mentally, while her sister was sharp and cynical, calling
the Gringo a liar when he said he would bring her the red shoes she saw
in the magazine. Why did he even say that? What did he want from her?
After being locked up by the mayor, why was the gringo willing to
follow him up the stairs into the attic and didn't even he even see
Madeinusa? Lots of questions...Wouldn't these indigenous people of Peru
speak Quechua or some indigenous language other than Spanish? Are we
really to believe that the young woman was so infuriated by her father
breaking her earrings (from her mother) that she killed him or that it
was really the violation of the sex he imposed on her? Lastly,
shouldn't her name have been MadeinChina? So few things are made in
this country these days!
7 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :- Enjoy it as art, 29 November 2006
Author:
makapara from Peru
We have seen so many documentary films concerning Peru and it's people,
that it is hard to realize that this is NOT a documentary and is a
fictional piece of work, and has to be taken as such. It is not a
mirror of reality. There are people, however, who do take it as
reality, usually those people have deep racial complexes, and who can
use the film as a way of saying, "I told you so", are regards the
behaviour and customs of the villagers, as shown fictionally in the
film. Of course, the film has taken it's main ideas from real customs,
but have dressed them up, exploited them and blown them out of
proportion. But that is what art is all about, and the film has to be
taken as such, pure art.
13 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :- A film whose qualities outweigh its faults, 19 April 2006
Author:
Oliver Luker from Barcelona, Spain
I am an English person living in Spain, whose partner is a Peruvian. We
were able to have a lively discussion concerning the merits of this
film, and its faults. The majority of the Peruvian film industry -
small though it may be - tends to make films of an overtly political
nature. This film instead recounts a much more simple, and more human,
theme. One might perhaps compare it with the classic movie The Wicker
Man - similar themes are explored.
Not every film must be an accurate depiction of the country as a whole
- indeed, it would ruinous if that were the case. Instead, what we have
here is a worthwhile attempt to recount a tale whose location in Peru
is, frankly, the least interesting aspect. That the Catholic church is
unquestioningly responsible for all manner of savagery is a matter of
opinion - one should not confound its works with those of the people
enacting them.
In all, a film well worth the money and a director worth watching.
7 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- A remarkable piece of art and Peruvian cinema, 1 October 2006
Author:
mateodelajara from Lima, Peru
Madeinusa follows the story of a young girl, named Madeinusa( the name
emphatize us the level of externalization----> made-in-USA) in love of
the occidental things, she admires quiet from the distance. This
distance seems shorter with the arrival of a Stranger from Lima,
Salvador who she fells in love with. Madeinusa has to deal also with
his incestuous father who prefers her than her sister Chale. Chale is
jealous from her sister because of his father preference, so she treats
her bad. The screenplay wrote by Claudia Llosa brings us pure
originality.She brings us a terrific debut. The actors in this movie
aren't celebrities at all, they are all debuting as well. The debut
performance of Magaly Solier is remarkable. I think this is one of the
best Peruvian movies so far.
0 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- What the heck?! This film is simply sick and awful!, 10 June 2008
Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
This is a totally bizarre film about a small town in rural Peru where
Christianity has devolved into a strange evil cult. It seems that once
a year, from Good Friday until Easter morning, the assumption is that
God is dead and there is no such thing as sin or evil So, every year at
this time the good people of this town act like pigs. This story
revolves around a young lady oddly named "Madeinusa" and the father
that can't wait to have sex with her during this three day period when
there is no God and sin can run rampant.
Sounds pretty charming, huh? This film is currently available on DVD
from the Film Movement Series. I have a membership and have seen many
of their international films and I have to say that MADEINUSA is by far
the worst film I have seen from this organization. It seemed very cruel
and nihilistic--the sort of film that is truly a chore to finish
watching. If you LIKE your films to be miserable and wretched, then
this movie is for you. The film abounds with dead rats, bodily fluids
and all around nastiness and life is just too short for this sort of
mess.
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videosfull cast and crewtriviaofficial sitesmemorable quotesOverview
main detailscombined detailsfull cast and crewcompany creditstv scheduleAwards & Reviews
user commentsexternal reviewsnewsgroup reviewsawardsuser ratingsparents guiderecommendationsmessage boardPlot & Quotes
plot summaryplot synopsisplot keywordsAmazon.com summarymemorable quotesFun Stuff
triviagoofssoundtrack listingcrazy creditsalternate versionsmovie connectionsFAQOther Info
merchandising linksbox office/businessrelease datesfilming locationstechnical specslaserdisc detailsDVD detailsliterature listingsNewsDeskPromotional
taglinestrailers and videospostersphoto galleryExternal Links
showtimesofficial sitesmiscellaneousphotographssound clipsvideo clipsIMDb user comments for
Madeinusa (2006)
15 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :-

Stepping into another world . . ., 2 August 2006
Author: Chris Docker (eyeforfilm) from Scotland, United Kingdom
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
A corpse being offered another drink, the bloodstained thighs of a maidenhead lost, dead rats (for luck), three days of religious celebration when God is dead, and a ritual for the whole village so secret that a visiting stranger is locked up: these are just some of the strange, wonderful images that remind us more of the Wicker Man than modern day Peru. But in a country where many rural areas are still isolated and barely accessible, where Christianity made its mark more in name than in spirit, and where the outback life is rarely depicted in Western cinemas, Madeinusa comes as a shock, a spellbinding insight, and a refreshingly different fable.
The nearest telephone is a three mile walk to the next village and the daily grind consists mostly of cultivating enough food to subsist. It comes as no surprise when Madeinusa, a pretty adolescent, is enamoured by the suave young man (Salvador) from Lima. He only stops in the remote Manayaycuna (the town no-one can enter) when the bus refuses to go any further due to floods. He symbolises everything she dreams the big city to be - and everything her present life is not. In Manayaycuna her life is mapped out for her, including arguments with her sister and the ever-present prospect of institutionalised incest with her father, the corrupt Mayor. The distant world outside includes things like pretty shoes and make-up - according to a magazine she once saw - but no-one would deliver such things as far away as Manayaycuna.
Shortly after Salvador arrives, Madeinusa wins the pageant held to choose the most Immaculate Virgin. Her heart is warmed by a Polaroid picture he takes of her. The Rituals that follow are a paganised version of the days leading up to Easter. An image of Christ is un-nailed and taken down before the beautifully bedecked virgin kisses him on the lips. The three days of celebration are marked by fireworks and festivities. They are the Holy Time, when God is dead, and as Madeinusa points out to Salvador (while taking some of her clothes off), this means He can't see any sins.
Madeinusa is a remarkably crafted work from first time filmmaker Claudia Llosa. Superb camera-work and vibrant colours let her linger on details without ever boring us. The roughly cobbled streets; the vegetables and pulses in worn peasant hands preparing them; the bright, highly intricate costumes; the wide open plains, and the snow capped mountains: Llosa takes us on a journey into the interior of a country that few of us will know well, and capitalises on our sense of awe to weave her fantastic tale. Like Salvador, we are almost voyeurs in a forbidden world: "The town doesn't want a gringo in Holy Time." The twists towards the end suggest that when fate hands out justice it may not be to everyone's liking (it may irritate some who long for traditional happy resolutions - at least until you think it through), but Madeinusa is more fable than fairy-tale. If it is too measured for viewers who prefer a fast paced drama, for those with the patience to listen it is a rare and slightly unsettling work. Madeinusa has a feeling of authenticity and dedication to the craft, as well as heralding a remarkable new talent in Director Claudia Llosa.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-
A few word to save Claudia, 7 January 2008
Author: Carlos Martinez Escalona from Mexico
Claudia Llosa explained many times why she made this film (It doesn't matter if she IS Peruvian or not... anyway, she IS.
It's not a docuementary. It's not a mockumentary. It's not a portrayal of reality. It's not a film to raise racial prejudices. It's not a film abusive of the people portrayed on it.
It's this crazy idea (a script idea that came out of a "dream") of what would it be like if a town (BTW: Manayaycuna actually means the place no-one-can-enter and is non-existent) believed that during three days there's no sin, since "God is dead".
Better approach it with the motto of "it's just a film, it's just a film"
It's a difficult film to watch, but, nonetheless, a work of fiction, so don't take it so personal. Some filmmakers in the world, and some writers -as I do, have found this film remarkable in many aspects.
When I read a comment calling names to whoever chooses to watch this film just for that decision... well, that person shouldn't be allowed to post here!
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

The Folk-art children are going to folk you up, 14 March 2008
Author: Chad Shiira from Mililani, Hawaii
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
"Madeinusa" is the "...Spinal Tap" of ethnographic movies. With its tongue firmly entrenched in cheek, this Peruvian film may have you defending incest for an embarrassingly long time. Writer/director Claudia Llosa knows her audience are culturally-sensitive, global citizens who wouldn't dream of insisting that a non-western settlement adopt our own Christian-sanctioned assortment of ideals and mores. When Cayo(Juan Ubaldo Huaman) jumps in bed with his two daughters(Madeinusa and Chale), we consider the social context and rationalize this deviant behavior as being the practices of a society that doesn't place a taboo on inter-family relationships. Funny thing, though; this Peruvian backwater IS a god-fearing community. Every year, they pretend he's dead for three days, literally dead, which means Jesus isn't just magic for the remaining three-hundred-sixty odd days to these country-folk, Jesus is alive. The town holds an annual pageant to crown this year's virgin, and this year, Madeinusa(Magaly Solier), is it. She's quite literally, a quasi-Christian beauty queen: Miss Dead Jesus. There's floats. There's fireworks. And most importantly, the people are granted a weekend-long get-out-of-hell card; without repercussions, debauchery(wife-swapping, the aforementioned incest) is practiced without the confinements of moral legislation. Now, at long last, incest can safely be called perverted, because Cayo does indeed know that having relations with your own flesh and blood is perverted. When the wayfaring gringo says that the town is crazy, it gives the audience permission to throw caution out the window and openly criticize their primitive inclinations.
Salvador(Carlos J. de la Torre) is a white man from Lima. He's our repository for western ideas(e.g. incest: a bad idea), the guy who is willing to call a spade a spade(he thinks the people are crazy; we concur), which is why his vertical quickie with Madeinusa in the midst of the communal grab-ass festival, startles us, because the film knows how men are. Fear of incarceration, sadly, may be the sole reason why the moral divide between camaraderie and intimacy isn't crossed. With no stronghold of the law to keep Salvador's libido in check, our "civilized" man pins Madeinusa to the wall and makes like a piston.
"Madeinusa" is a stinging indictment against organized religion. Think about Father Oliver O'Grady in "Deliver us from Evil" who violated all those little boys and girls. These Peruvians(fictionalized Peruvians, let me make that clear) are honest about the darker side of human nature. "Madeinusa", cobbled from Stephen King's "Children of the Corn"(short story, film; either/or) and Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery", forces us to ask about the state of God each time we sin. We're all assassins, right? It doesn't take a village.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

The most underestimated independent movie theme/idea of all time!, 6 March 2008
Author: Victor Camacho (vicc777@hotmail.com) from Mexico City
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
This movie's truly original pitch/premise has so much potential, and I can't stress enough the words SO MUCH POTENTIAL, that the story Claudia Llosa chose in the end, although interesting and beautiful in it's own way, falls short compared to the expectation THAT pitch creates. In other words, there are so many possibilities regarding human sinful behavior and how to approach it given this 'sin doesn't exist for like 3 days for some "faithful believers"' idea that one is left wanting to see the movie from the point of view of 5 or 6 totally different characters instead.
The movie won like 5 or 6 Best Screenplay awards in different film festivals besides winning an award at the Mar del Plata film festival AND being nominated for Best Foreign Film at the Academy Awards, which says a lot. However, the screenplay is not perfect. There are scenes which are dull and to be honest, plain dumb; a couple of others could've been left out without causing a negative effect.
But talking about Madeinusa's positive aspects and artistic value, the movie's defining moment (and the most memorable one in "first-time-acting/first-time-directing" independent film making history, I must say) has got to be Magaly Solier's interpretation of the song (created by herself, by the way) she sings to Salvador. The most humble, truly innocent, naive and authentic performance you'll ever see this side of the world. That scene alone is worth watching a couple of times and help diminish all those little plot holes/errors/contradictions that could've been polished to perfection in Llosa's script.
7 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

worth every accolade, 5 January 2007
Author: prekkeh from United States
I had the pleasure of seeing this movie on the last night of my first Peru vacation. The actors inhabited their characters and were very well defined. Madeinusa, the main character was scary in her "innocent evil" yet she remained sympathetic throughout the story. I found it hard to believe she had no previous acting experience. The story was captivating. It pulled me in from the start and spat me out wanting at its ending. I'll never look at the period between Good Friday and Easter Sunday the same way again. The scenery and cinematography was breathtaking and went a long way to carry the mood of the film.
I can't wait for the US release. This film is a must-see!
9 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :-

lots of questions, 11 June 2006
Author: carla10012002 from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I have spent time traveling in Peru and speak Spanish and found the portrayal of indigenous life and especially the religious ceremonies fascinating. I was horrified by the incest and in particular the aunt who pimped her niece to the father. I don't think Madeinusa fell in love with the gringo, as one review in the Seattle International Film Festival said, but that she was in wonder at someone so different. She seemed slow mentally, while her sister was sharp and cynical, calling the Gringo a liar when he said he would bring her the red shoes she saw in the magazine. Why did he even say that? What did he want from her? After being locked up by the mayor, why was the gringo willing to follow him up the stairs into the attic and didn't even he even see Madeinusa? Lots of questions...Wouldn't these indigenous people of Peru speak Quechua or some indigenous language other than Spanish? Are we really to believe that the young woman was so infuriated by her father breaking her earrings (from her mother) that she killed him or that it was really the violation of the sex he imposed on her? Lastly, shouldn't her name have been MadeinChina? So few things are made in this country these days!
7 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :-

Enjoy it as art, 29 November 2006
Author: makapara from Peru
We have seen so many documentary films concerning Peru and it's people, that it is hard to realize that this is NOT a documentary and is a fictional piece of work, and has to be taken as such. It is not a mirror of reality. There are people, however, who do take it as reality, usually those people have deep racial complexes, and who can use the film as a way of saying, "I told you so", are regards the behaviour and customs of the villagers, as shown fictionally in the film. Of course, the film has taken it's main ideas from real customs, but have dressed them up, exploited them and blown them out of proportion. But that is what art is all about, and the film has to be taken as such, pure art.
13 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :-

A film whose qualities outweigh its faults, 19 April 2006
Author: Oliver Luker from Barcelona, Spain
I am an English person living in Spain, whose partner is a Peruvian. We were able to have a lively discussion concerning the merits of this film, and its faults. The majority of the Peruvian film industry - small though it may be - tends to make films of an overtly political nature. This film instead recounts a much more simple, and more human, theme. One might perhaps compare it with the classic movie The Wicker Man - similar themes are explored.
Not every film must be an accurate depiction of the country as a whole - indeed, it would ruinous if that were the case. Instead, what we have here is a worthwhile attempt to recount a tale whose location in Peru is, frankly, the least interesting aspect. That the Catholic church is unquestioningly responsible for all manner of savagery is a matter of opinion - one should not confound its works with those of the people enacting them.
In all, a film well worth the money and a director worth watching.
7 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-

A remarkable piece of art and Peruvian cinema, 1 October 2006
Author: mateodelajara from Lima, Peru
Madeinusa follows the story of a young girl, named Madeinusa( the name emphatize us the level of externalization----> made-in-USA) in love of the occidental things, she admires quiet from the distance. This distance seems shorter with the arrival of a Stranger from Lima, Salvador who she fells in love with. Madeinusa has to deal also with his incestuous father who prefers her than her sister Chale. Chale is jealous from her sister because of his father preference, so she treats her bad. The screenplay wrote by Claudia Llosa brings us pure originality.She brings us a terrific debut. The actors in this movie aren't celebrities at all, they are all debuting as well. The debut performance of Magaly Solier is remarkable. I think this is one of the best Peruvian movies so far.
0 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

What the heck?! This film is simply sick and awful!, 10 June 2008
Author: planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
This is a totally bizarre film about a small town in rural Peru where Christianity has devolved into a strange evil cult. It seems that once a year, from Good Friday until Easter morning, the assumption is that God is dead and there is no such thing as sin or evil So, every year at this time the good people of this town act like pigs. This story revolves around a young lady oddly named "Madeinusa" and the father that can't wait to have sex with her during this three day period when there is no God and sin can run rampant.
Sounds pretty charming, huh? This film is currently available on DVD from the Film Movement Series. I have a membership and have seen many of their international films and I have to say that MADEINUSA is by far the worst film I have seen from this organization. It seemed very cruel and nihilistic--the sort of film that is truly a chore to finish watching. If you LIKE your films to be miserable and wretched, then this movie is for you. The film abounds with dead rats, bodily fluids and all around nastiness and life is just too short for this sort of mess.
Add another comment
Related Links