El Gringo

2012

Action / Drama

Plot summary


Uploaded by: OTTO

Top cast

Christian Slater Photo
Christian Slater as Lt. West
Scott Adkins Photo
Scott Adkins as The Man
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
651.46 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 39 min
P/S 0 / 3
1.35 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 39 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by kosmasp5 / 10

Not foreign at all

Even clichés can be nice to watch. So while the title is talking about a "stranger/foreigner", the plot itself is actually pretty common. You might have seen similar stories told and some even in a better fashion (hopefully). But this still is a lot of fun, if you let it. There are some nice little visual tweaks here and there and the editing style is all over the place too. It might not be your taste, but you can't fault the movie for trying.

Scott Adkins delivers again and you can see why he sort of revives the 80s action movie style almost by himself. He has that kind of charisma and I don't mean that in a degrading way. The dog sub story is good and even Christian Slater isn't a big letdown as he was in his last couple of movies ...

Reviewed by Woodyanders8 / 10

The gringo just wants water to drink and the first bus out of town

A mysterious man (a solid and likeable performance by Scott Adkins) with no name shows up in the small lawless town of El Fronteras in Mexico with a bag containing two million dollars cash. Once the word gets out about the man's money, a motley assortment of no-count folks all come after him for said cash.

Director Eduardo Rodriguez relates the enjoyable and engrossing story at a brisk pace, offers a pleasingly grimy'n'gritty south of the border atmosphere, astutely captures the unsparing severity of the desert heat, and stages the copious exciting action with considerable skill and flair. The compact script by Jonathan W. Stokes presents a colorful array of seedy characters along with a wickedly funny sense of sly humor (there's an especially amusing running gag about the man having trouble getting a glass of water to drink).

Adkins makes for an engaging hero; he receives sturdy support from Christian Slater as the crooked Lt. West, Yvette Yates as sassy, but helpful barmaid Anna, Sofia Sisniega as the feisty Flaca, Israel Islas as the ruthless Culebra, Erando Gonzalez as a corrupt police chief, and Mariy Rosen as the bumbling Naco. Yaron Levy's sun-bleached widescreen cinematography provides an appropriately sweaty look. A total blast.

Reviewed by Tweekums7 / 10

Solid action South of the Border

This action movie is centred on an unnamed American policeman who, following an operation that goes badly wrong, crosses the border into Mexico with a large bag full of money. He makes his way to the town of El Fronteras where he gets a very frosty reception. He can't even buy a glass of water. The town is run by a corrupt sheriff and a criminal gang; they don't want strangers in their town and the rest of the population are too scared to confront them. Our protagonist's only ally is the woman who runs the bar and even she will be pleased when he leaves. Things get worse when people learn what is in his bag.

This film was never going to be in contention to win any awards but if you are looking for action you can do a lot worse. The rudimentary plot might not be the most original but it provides a good excuse for plenty of stylishly shot action. Scott Adkins does a solid job as our protagonist and other notable performances come from Yvette Yates, as the bar owner; Sofía Sisniega, as a would-be gang member and Christian Slater as Adkin's boss. For the most part the film is near non-stop action or moments where action could erupt at any moment. There is also a degree of humour at times and an unnecessary, but fairly tame, sex scene. Overall I wouldn't say this is a must see film but it is worth watching if you are a fan of action; it was certainly better than I expected.

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