| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
| Daniel Giménez Cacho | ... | Narrator (voice) | |
|
|
Ana López Mercado | ... | Ana Morelos |
| Diego Luna | ... | Tenoch Iturbide | |
| Gael García Bernal | ... | Julio Zapata | |
|
|
Nathan Grinberg | ... | Manuel Huerta |
| Verónica Langer | ... | María Eugenia Calles de Huerta | |
| María Aura | ... | Cecilia Huerta | |
|
|
Giselle Audirac | ... | Nicole Bazaine |
| Arturo Ríos | ... | Esteban Morelos | |
| Andrés Almeida | ... | Diego 'Saba' Madero | |
| Diana Bracho | ... | Silvia Allende de Iturbide | |
| Emilio Echevarría | ... | Miguel Iturbide | |
| Marta Aura | ... | Enriqueta 'Queta' Allende | |
| Maribel Verdú | ... | Luisa Cortés | |
| Juan Carlos Remolina | ... | Alejandro 'Jano' Montes de Oca | |
In Mexico City, late teen friends Tenoch Iturbide and Julio Zapata are feeling restless as their respective girlfriends are traveling together through Europe before they all begin the next phase of their lives at college. At a lavish family wedding, Tenoch and Julio meet Luisa Cortés, the twenty-something wife of Tenoch's cousin Jano, the two who have just moved to Mexico from Spain. Tenoch and Julio try to impress the beautiful Luisa by telling her that they will be taking a trip to the most beautiful secluded beach in Mexico called la Boca del Cielo (translated to Heaven's Mouth), the trip and the beach which in reality don't exist. When Luisa learns of Jano's latest marital indiscretion straight from the horse's mouth, she takes Tenoch and Julio's offer to go along on this road trip, meaning that Tenoch and Julio have to pull together quickly a road trip to a non-existent beach. They decide to head toward one suggested by their friend Saba, who seems a little confused himself of ... Written by Huggo
From the recent comments on this film board, it's amazing how people can watch this film all the way through and at the end not have any idea what it was about.
This was quite simply one of the best films I've seen in recent years. Using three central characters -- two immature adolescent males and a young woman in crisis -- set in a road-trip situation, it was hardly a road-trip movie. Nor was it an adolescent movie. Nor was it a woman-in-crisis movie. Nor was it about sex. Instead, what starts out with a sizzling but ditzy prologue becomes something much deeper and much more profound as it goes along. By the end I was breathless and somewhat stunned. The character study is amazing. The societal insights are haunting. The shared humanity it exposes is painful at time but ultimately reaffirming and uplifting. These are three of the most memorable, identifiable and completely human characters I've seen on screen in ages. They taught me more about life and the human species than the last ten movies I've seen put together. I'll not soon forget Julio, Tenoch and Luisa and their eye-opening journey to Boca del Cielo.