The News-Times

Masked-motorcycli­st film ‘El Chicano’ goes nowhere

- By Carla Meyer Carla Meyer is a Northern California freelance writer.

El Chicano Rated: R. Running time: 144 minutes. 66 out of four

Ben Hernandez Bray, director of the masked- avenger film “El Chicano,” is a veteran Hollywood stunt coordinato­r. So it would seem a given that the film’s action sequences would be good.

But these blurry, hurried scenes are among the most frustratin­g elements in a largely disappoint­ing film. They are speeded-up and edited in a manner that obscures the action. Even the big reveal scene in which LAPD detective Diego (Raúl Castillo) first shows up dressed as El Chicano is hard to make out.

In between all that rushing, the pacing is leaden. The script by Bray and filmmaker Joe Carnahan (“The Grey”) spends too much time on Diego’s and El Chicano’s back stories.

Diego and his twin, Pedro, grew up in East L.A. knowing the legend of El Chicano, a chopper-riding killer of criminals. El Chicano apparently made sure everybody knew it. He put his graffiti-like mark on stop signs at the ends of streets where he was going to take out the next bad guy. Then he would knock down the signs. He was an over-killer.

Diego grew up to be a cop and Pedro a criminal, because “priest” apparently already was taken in the twin-cliché handbook. Pedro is dead by the time we meet the adult Diego. This is sad for the family but a relief for viewers. Castillo, from HBO’s “Looking,” is a highly compelling presence, and he broods believably as Diego. But playing twins throughout the movie would have been high-wire acting that this low-budget film does not appear to have the infrastruc­ture to support.

Diego’s decision to transform himself into El Chicano to fight a cartel, for example, is unsupporte­d by the script, despite all that back story. Diego also lacks any nuance as a character. He is grim and humorless, like most everything else about this film. The hint of twinkle that George Lopez brings to the role of Diego’s captain is the only suggestion of fun in “El Chicano.” Carnahan’s films are a mixed lot, but he brings a brio to them that goes missing here.

A character in “El Chicano” mentions Los Angeles’ zoot suit riots of the 1940s, and playwright/filmmaker Luis Valdez, who directed the 1981 film “Zoot Suit.” Such shout-outs give welcome cultural context to “El Chicano,” as a film set in L.A. with a predominan­tly Latinx cast. But they also elicit comparison­s between the films’ respective mythical figures, and El Chicano comes off as a wet blanket next to Edward James Olmos’ charismati­c El Pachuco in “Zoot Suit.”

 ?? / ?? Diego (Raúl Castillo) begins his transforma­tion into a masked avenger in “El Chicano.”
/ Diego (Raúl Castillo) begins his transforma­tion into a masked avenger in “El Chicano.”

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