Mel Gibson's Apocalypto (Widescreen Edition)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Studio: Buena Vista Home Entertainment / Touchstone
Release Date: 2007-05-22
Running Time: 139 minutes
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Starring:
Gerardo Taracena, Raoul Trujillo, Dalia Hernández, Rudy Youngblood, Jonathan Brewer
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Product Description
Dalia Hernandez, Rudy Youngblood, Morris Birdyellowhead. A mythic adventure about a young hunter in ancient South America and his struggle to survive after Mayan priests select him to be the next human sacrifice. Will his knowledge of the Yucat+¡n be enough to turn the tables on the warriors chasing him? An intense action adventure with dialogue spoken entirely in the ancient Yucatec Maya language. 2006/color/138 min/R/widescreen.
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Forget any off-screen impressions you may have of Mel Gibson, and experience
Apocalypto as the mad, bloody runaway train that it is. The story is set in the pre-Columbian Maya population: one village is brutally overrun, its residents either slaughtered or abducted, by a ruling tribe that needs slaves and human sacrifices. We focus on the capable warrior Jaguar Paw (Rudy Youngblood), although Gibson skillfully sketches a whole population of characters--many of whom don't survive the early reels. Most of the film is set in the dense jungle, but the middle section, in a grand Mayan city, is a dazzling triumph of design, costuming, and sheer decadent terror. The movie itself is a triumph of brutality, as Gibson lets loose his well-established fascination with bodily mortification in a litany of assaults including impalement, evisceration, snakebite, and bee stings. It's a dark, disgusted vision, but Gibson doesn't forget to apply some very canny moviemaking instincts to the violence--including the creation of a tremendous pair of villains (strikingly played by Raoul Trujillo and Rodolfo Palacias). The film is in a Maya dialect, subtitled in English, and shot on digital video (which occasionally betrays itself in some blurry quick pans). Amidst all the mayhem, nothing in the film is more devastating than a final wordless exchange of looks between captured villager Blunted (Jonathan Brewer) and his wife's mother (Maria Isabel Diaz), a superb change in tone from their early relationship. Yes, this is an obsessive, crazed movie, but Gibson knows what he's doing.
--Robert Horton Beyond Apocalypto
 More films directed by Mel Gibson |  Apocalypto soundtrack by James Horner |
Stills from Mel Gibson's Apocalypto (click for larger image)
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