Nicotina Movie Review
Nicotina Review

"Nicotina" Overview

Rating: R
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Hugo RodríguezProducer : Laura Imperiale,Federico González Compeán
Screenwiter : Martín Salinas
Starring : Diego Luna,Marta Beláustegui,Rosa María Bianchi,Lucas Crespi,Daniel Giménez Cacho,Rafael Inclán,Carmen Madrid,Jesús Ochoa
This case of one thing leading to another and nobody getting what they want is
sprinkled with bad guys you don't much like, bad guys you do like, and a few
pissy people you'd like to see taken out or taken away. Nicotina is a comedy of
errors that Peter Sellers, if he were around, might find amusing.
Computer hacker Lolo (Diego Luna) finds himself in the center of a scam to
trade Swiss bank account data for diamonds with Svóboda (Norman Sotolongo), an
overstuffed and bearded Russian mobster with a nasty disposition. Lolo's pals
Nene and Tomson (Lucas Crespi and Jésus Ochoa) are the scammers who set up the
deal and are depending on Lolo to burn a CD disc with the bank info. To the
point of annoyance, they continue to haggle over the lethal effects of
cigarettes in order to provide the film its title.
Andrea (Marta Beláustegui), Lolo's pretty neighbor and object of his desire,
discovers he has betrayed her privacy by documenting her romantic trysts with
hidden cameras and microphones that he installed in her apartment. Her attempt
to destroy his collection of spy CDs of her results in a disc mix-up and Lolo
taking the wrong one for trade with the Russian.
Svóboda's computer expert quickly discovers the worthlessness of the CD he's
been handed. The exchange is off and panic shooting through the Mexico City
neighborhood begins, bringing us an assortment of soon-to-be-involved players.
At the pharmacy, tyrannical husband Beto (Daniel Giménez Cacho) is busy
trashing his wife Clara (Carmen Madrid), which he follows up by trying to
seduce her. This tension goes to another level later, when Tomson brings armed
and wounded Nene to the pharmacy for bandaging while Beto is upstairs taking a
shower.
Down the street, gentle barber Goyo (Rafael Inclán) and witchy wife Carmen
(Rosa María Bianchi) turn out to be part of dying Svóboda's escape plan but
when Carmen overhears him on the phone saying things like, "...stuffed the
diamonds" and "...belly," she sees holidays and high living in her future and
she's not above some desperate and disgusting means of realizing her visions.
The opening sequence of Lolo's shenanigans with Andrea is a tedious mini-movie
of its own that this screenplay, written by Martín Salinas out of three short
movie ideas, should have done without. But once Lolo is out of his apartment
and into Nene and Tomson's caper, Nicotina finds its bearings. Known at home by
its Spanish title (translating roughly to Cigarettes, Alienations, and 20
Diamonds), it comes off as an updated Latin take on Lock, Stock and Two Smoking
Barrels (1998), itself a derivative of Big Deal on Madonna Street (1960).
Despite that line of inheritance, a dumb sub-theme that bears no relationship
to anything except part of the Spanish title, and dated visual techniques like
multi paneling and screen wipes, its parody of bad intentions provides its own
unique sources of rib-tickling fun and an endearing observation of common
traits and unwholesome character.
Aka Cigarros, Desamores, y 20 Diamantes.
She wore green velvet.
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Review by Jules Brenner
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