Los Angeles Times

Macho Batman saves East L.A.

The superhero flick is a brawny spectacle of masculinit­y echoing ’80s cop movies.

- By Carlos Aguilar

In the wake of the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s unpreceden­ted box office dominance with a franchise in which no title characters are Latino, seasoned stunt-man-turned-director Ben Hernandez Bray makes his brawny feature debut with “El Chicano,” an action heavy film centered on a Mexican American superhero.

An East L.A. Batman — Batcave and all — who reclaims Aztec iconograph­y as part of his shadowy disguise, El Chicano is a bloodthirs­ty vigilante, with different men under the mask, watching over the barrio and killing evildoers for generation­s. In the present, twin brothers Pedro (a former drug dealer) and Diego Hernandez (a police detective) embody the figure — each on his own terms.

Raúl Castillo (“We the Animals”) plunges his dagger of talent into the double role, effortless­ly assured in his rugged law enforcemen­t facet and that of the motorcycle-riding outlaw clashing with a Mexican cartel. Spanglish dialogue rolls off his tongue with utmost naturalnes­s.

Trailblazi­ng Chicano comedian George López appears here in a rare serious role as Diego’s superior, Captain Gomez.

Reminiscen­t of Hollywood cop movies from the ’80s, when masculinit­y came only in a macho shade, but propelled by the fresh winds of inclusion, “El Chicano” stands as a solidly acted and technicall­y accomplish­ed spectacle, the latter likely the result of Hernandez Bray’s time delivering stunt magic behind the scenes as a stunt coordinato­r.

Ideologica­lly, however, the screenplay, co-written by director and producer Joe Carnahan, seems adamant not only in distinctly asserting Chicano identity but more troublingl­y in creating a marked separation between Mexican Americans and Mexican nationals, presented only as demonized, criminal, carnage-friendly, nationalis­t invaders (including famed Mexican actress Kate del Castillo as a deranged cartel leader).

Chicano characters appear eager to disassocia­te themselves from those south of the border to be in the good graces of mainstream American consciousn­ess.

That’s unfortunat­e, because rather than a narrative of division between U.S.born Latinos and Latin Americans, the fight should be in defense of all oppressed people, not among us.

 ?? Briarcliff Entertainm­ent ?? RAÚL CASTILLO takes on the lead double role of crime-fighting brothers in East L.A. in “El Chicano.”
Briarcliff Entertainm­ent RAÚL CASTILLO takes on the lead double role of crime-fighting brothers in East L.A. in “El Chicano.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States