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Nacho Libre (2006) Movie Information:
Nacho Libre (2006) Directed by:
Jared Hess
Nacho Libre (2006) Written by:
Jared Hess, Jerusha Hess, Mike White
Nacho Libre (2006) Cast:
Jack Black, Héctor Jimenez, Richard Montoya, Ana de la Reguera, Peter Stormare
Nacho Libre (2006) U.S. Distributor:
Paramount Pictures
Nacho Libre (2006) U.K. Distributor:
UIP
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Nacho Libre (2006) Synopsis:

Jack Black stars as Ignacio (friends call him Nacho), a Mexican priest who moonlights as a lucha libre wrestler to raise money for his orphanage in this comedy from the creators of “Napoleon Dynamite” and the writer and star of “The School of Rock.”

Nacho Libre (2006) Movie Review:

The makers of Napoleon Dynamite are back with another comedy that hinges on deriding ordinary people. At least the hysterically energetic Jack Black generates some sympathy.

Ignacio (Black) has grown up in a Oaxaca orphanage, forced into menial labour by the monks he aspires to join. But he also harbours a desire to become a luchador and take on the notorious Ramses (Gonzalez) in the ring. Using the wrestler name Nacho, he finds a training partner, the rake-thin Esqueleto (Jiménez), and they're amazed how much they earn when they lose. Which is all the time. Yes, Ignacio has a way to go before he faces Ramses. Especially as he also hopes to impress a hot new nun (de la Reguera).

As with his previous film, director-cowriter Hess delights in ridiculing normal people for their age, weight, ethnicity, faith, anything he can make fun of. And he does it in the same languorous style, simply pointing his camera at a face and asking us to laugh at it. But this is actually rather offensive, especially when you're making a film set in a Mexican monastery and half of the humour is supposed to come from silly English accents and religious beliefs.

The slow pacing only rarely allows the wackiness to blossom into something sublime. Although there here are moments of genius, such as the hilariously outrageous fight sequences, which are brilliantly choreographed. Overall the film is charming and goofy, but only rarely laugh-out-loud amusing. The worst bit is the pointless and unfunny training montage that asks us to find underpants, cowpats and bee stings inherently comical.

Hess clearly doesn't understand that genuine comedy needs context. His strain of humour is of the cruel post-Gen X variety, valuing mockery above wit. So this film's only salvation is its adept cast, who all give heartfelt performances that win us over. Black is encouraged to go for broke, with unrestrained physical silliness so cartoonish that it's amazing we engage with Ignacio as much as we do. Black and Jiménez emerge as a terrific movie duo, which makes us wish the film had a sharper director to bring them to life.

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Nacho Libre (2006) review written by: Rich Cline

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