Los Angeles Times

Gay grappler won hearts in Mexico

- — Robert Abele

With camp grace and bulldog ferocity, El Pasoborn luchador Cassandro took the Mexican wrestling world by storm in the 1990s as its first openly gay performer, a popular champion on the drag-tinged exotica circuit whose feathered, colorful appearance charmed alongside his killer, pile-driving athleticis­m.

Now he’s the subject of French curator/filmmaker Marie Losier’s loving, loose documentar­y “Cassandro the Exotico!,” an impression­istic 16mm portrait in which the now fortysomet­hing star finds grappling with imminent retirement much harder to process than masked challenger­s. For a gay kid in a macho culture whose growing up was marked by targeted abuse and substance addiction, the thrill of lucha libre was “like a free therapy session,” and the gloriously coiffed entertaine­r’s love for his art seems inexorably entwined with the pride he takes in being sober since 2003.

He’s as excitable in the throes of his pre-show routine as he is dropkickin­g opponents or executing a dazzling flip — he even beams with joy leading a class of luchador-loving fans hoping to replicate his moves. But the toll his profession has taken on his body, requiring multiple surgeries, ultimately creates a different kind of pain management — one psychic as much as physical — and it lends Losier’s intimate mélange of observatio­n, music-laden montage and dreamlike fantasy a uniquely artful compassion toward the nontraditi­onally lived life.

“Cassandro the Exotico!” In English and Spanish with English subtitles. Not rated. Run time: 1 hour, 13 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Glendale.

 ?? Film Movement ?? MEXICAN gay wrestling hero Cassandro (top) in action in a scene from Marie Losier’s documentar­y.
Film Movement MEXICAN gay wrestling hero Cassandro (top) in action in a scene from Marie Losier’s documentar­y.

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