Desperado Movie Review
Desperado Review
"Desperado" Overview

Rating: R
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Robert RodriguezProducer : Robert Rodriguez
Screenwiter : Robert Rodriguez
Starring : Antonio Banderas,Salma Hayek
Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez seem to have two things in common: an
affection for old surfer-style tunes, and an unconditional love of blood. Both
play heavy parts in Rodriguez's eye-popping new flick, Desperado, the $8
million sequel to his $7,000 first feature, El Mariachi, which lives up to the
hype surrounding it.
In Desperado, Antonio Banderas takes the role of the mariachi with no name who
leads a charmed life while everything around him dies. This sequel is the
story of his quest for revenge against the men who killed the woman he loved
and shot him in the hand. El Mariachi travels from town to town with a guitar
case full of ultra-powerful weapons, in search for tough guy Bucho, leader of
the thugs. As he closes in, things get bloodier and bloodier until the final
showdown where everything is revealed. Along the way, he encounters Carolina
(Salma Hayek), his newfound love interest, who saves his life more than once
through some impromptu surgeries.
Banderas is simply incredible in his role as the man of few words and many
bullets. Steve Buscemi, Cheech Marin, and Tarantino all have solid supporting
parts, mainly for much-needed comic relief, and Hayek is passable in her role,
although her romance with Banderas seems a little forced. (I suspect meddling
from the studio gave birth to the steamier scenes).
While the black comedy of Desperado is good, Rodriguez is still a better
director/editor than writer, and the wickedly cool gunplay sequences are
clearly the prime reason to see the film. Although not for the faint of heart,
the seriously gory fights that El Mariachi gets into are spectacularly arranged
and innovatively photographed, and they bring new life to the action movie
genre. Unfortunately for other action filmmakers, Rodriguez has raised the
stakes and is clearly now "the one to beat." He even manages to work in an
anti-drug message for the kids in the audience.
Desperado is faithful to the backstory of El Mariachi, and even Carlos
Gallardo, the original man in black, returns as Banderas's right hand man. The
only thing missing is the best "character" from the original: the dog, who
rode off into the sunset with Gallardo at the end of El Mariachi. I guess you
can't have everything.
For raw entertainment value, Desperado is one of the best bets to come along in
months. Be warned, though: there's enough blood here to fill a swimming
pool. And on the big screen, you'll feel like you're swimming in it.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





