Tripti Joshi (Editor)

We Are What We Are (2010 film)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
6
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
6
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
61
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Jorge Michel Grau

Initial DVD release
  
July 26, 2011

Duration
  

Language
  
Spanish

5.8/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama, Horror

Screenplay
  
Jorge Michel Grau

Country
  
Mexico

We Are What We Are (2010 film) movie poster

Release date
  
March 15, 2010 (2010-03-15) (Guadalajara)

Writer
  
Jorge Michel Grau (screenplay)

Cast
  
Paulina Gaitán
(Sabina),
Adrián Aguirre
,
Miriam Balderas
,
Francisco Barreiro

Similar movies
  
I Spit on Your Grave III: Vengeance is Mine
,
The Case of the Scorpion's Tail
,
Bloody Moon
,
W Delta Z
,
Mad Max: Fury Road
,
Halloween

Tagline
  
Young. Wild. Hungry.

We Are What We Are (Spanish: Somos lo que hay) is a 2010 Mexican cannibal horror film directed by Jorge Michel Grau. The movie is about a family of cannibals who, after the death of the father, try to continue a ritualistic tradition of kidnapping and eating other humans. The film stars Paulina Gaitán and Daniel Giménez Cacho.

Contents

We Are What We Are (2010 film) movie scenes

We are what we are official trailer 1 2013 ambyr childers horror movie hd


Plot

We Are What We Are (2010 film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters8340510p834

In the opening scene, Dad dies on the sidewalk at a local shopping mall. At home, his family is wondering what has become of him. Dad is a watchmaker who repairs watches at the local street market, and the family's sole means of support.

We Are What We Are (2010 film) Film Review We Are What We Are 2010 HNN

As Dad has not appeared for the day's work, Alfredo and Julián head to the market. Julián gets into a fight with a customer who claims that his watch is three weeks overdue. The woman who runs the market appears and tells the boys to get out; the rent for their booth at the market is three weeks in arrears.

We Are What We Are (2010 film) We Are What We Are 2010 Reviewed un film de

When the boys arrive at home, their sister Sabina enters in a state of shock and announces that their father has died. Their mother, Patricia, locks herself in her room; the children wonder who is going to provide for the family now—specifically, their meals: this family performs cannibalistic rituals.

We Are What We Are (2010 film) Film Review We Are What We Are 2010 HNN

In a local morgue, Tito the coroner and the director of the funeral home bring in Octavio and Owen, two police detectives. The coroner shows them a finger in a jar: it was pulled from Dad's stomach. The detectives are asked to solve this cold case. Initially, they resist, but as the film continues, they become more interested in the fame that will come with solving it.

Alfredo and Julián attempt to kidnap a homeless child from under a local bridge, but are chased off by the other children. Next, they attempt to kidnap a prostitute, who also resists; Julián punches and stuffs her into the back seat of their car.

We Are What We Are (2010 film) Rent We Are What We Are aka Somos Lo Que Hay 2010 film

Back at home, the boys tie the prostitute to the kitchen table. Patricia comes in and beats the woman to death with a shovel, claiming that Alfredo doesn't know what he's doing, and that prostitutes are not appropriate for the ritual. Alfredo runs out while Julián and Sabina wrap the dead woman in a sheet. Julián and Patricia take the prostitute back to the corner where the boys picked her up and dump her in front of the other street workers. Patricia tells the women to leave her sons alone. The prostitutes report the incident to detectives Octavio and Owen.

Alfredo goes looking for another potential meal; he finds one in a gay bar. Alfredo brings the young man home with him, but Julián says he won't eat a homosexual. As Alfredo and Julián argue the point, an older man comes down from their mother's room. Alfredo's prey escapes while Patricia beats the older man over the head with a shovel and the family later kills him.

As Sabina and Patricia prepare the man for eating, Alfredo and Julián chase after the gay boy. The boy runs to a fast food stand and asks the police to protect him. Detectives Octavio and Owen hear the call over their police radio and head to the scene. They decline to call for backup, as they want to keep the glory of the collar for themselves.

Detective Octavio stops Alfredo and Julián in an alley, but is shot by a beat cop who mistakes Octavio for one of the cannibals. Detective Owen discovers Sabina and Patricia preparing their meal in a ritualistic fashion, but the women kill him. Alfredo and Julián arrive home; Patricia insists on completing the ritual, but Alfredo drags her away to escape over the rooftops.

The police break into the family's home and Julián shoots several of them before the family manages to hide upstairs. Their mother says that one must survive to carry on the ritual and flees to the rooftop. The prostitutes earlier in the film see her escaping and pursue her.

Meanwhile, Alfredo bites Sabina's neck. Julián, thinking Alfredo's attempting to eat Sabina, shoots Alfredo. The police kill Julián and take Sabina away in an ambulance, believing that she is a surviving victim. The next morning Patricia's body is discovered in a playground, beaten to death.

At the end of the film, Sabina escapes from the hospital and is seen watching a young man in the local market, intent on her next meal.

Cast

  • Humberto Yáñez as Dad
  • Carmen Beato as Patricia the Mother
  • Francisco Barreiro as Alfredo the Older Brother
  • Alan Chávez as Julián the Younger Brother
  • Paulina Gaitán as Sabina the Sister
  • Daniel Giménez Cacho as Tito the Coroner, a character that also appears in the horror film Cronos from 1993
  • Juan Carlos Colombo as Director of the funeral home
  • Jorge Zárate as Detective Owen
  • Esteban Soberanes as Detective Octavio
  • Octavio Michel as Teniente
  • Miguel Ángel Hoppe as Gustavo
  • Raúl Kennedy as Adán
  • Adrián Aguirre as Adriana
  • Miriam Balderas as Sheyla
  • Production

    The director Jorge Michel Grau himself narrated his film on the 2010 Cannes Film Festival. We Are What We Are was completely shot in Mexico City. Daniel Giménez Cacho reprised his role as Tito the Coroner, a character from the horror movie Cronos from 1993, directed by Guillermo del Toro. Some characters are also played by Paulina Gaitán and Francisco Barreiro who won with his former project Perpetuum Mobile film the Best Mexican Feature award on the Guadalajara International Film Festival.

    Release

    It featured the Mexico's National Film School and premiered on 15 March 2010 as part of the Guadalajara International Film Festival. The film tells of the violence of the people and their foreclosure and was part of the Cannes Film Market 2010. The Mexican horror film is part of the Fantasia 2010. The film will release over IFC Films as We Are What We Are in the United States. The film had his UK premiere on 30 August 2010 as part of the Film4 FrightFest 2010. IFC Film will release the film in the United States as Video-on-demand. Artificial Eye will release We Are What We Are in the UK on 12 November 2010.

    Soundtrack

    The score was composed by Odd Crew.

    Reception

    Deborah Young of Reuters said, that We Are What We Are "is perhaps too dark and relentlessly humorless to find wide international audiences." Young stated that "another limiting factor is the difficulty of identifying with any of the characters, who are played expressively but still remain abstract and alien, distant from the viewer." Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 72% based on 43 reviews from critics, with a "Certified Fresh" rating.

    Awards

    Fantastic Fest

  • Best Film
  • Best Screenplay
  • Fantasia International Film Festival

  • Séquences Ex-Aequo Award
  • Expresión en Corto International Film Festival

  • Best First Film
  • Chicago International Film Festival

  • Silver Hugo-Special Jury Prize
  • Festival international du film fantastique de Gérardmer

  • Jury Prize
  • Remake

    Memento Films International optioned the rights for an English-language remake starring Julia Garner and Ambyr Childers, directed by Jim Mickle and written by Mickle and Nick Damici, who previously worked together on Mulberry Street and Stake Land.

    References

    We Are What We Are (2010 film) Wikipedia
    We Are What We Are (2010 film) IMDb We Are What We Are (2010 film) themoviedb.org