Sicario 4K HDR | Welcome To Juárez
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- Опубликовано: 5 ноя 2021
- #DenisVilleneuve #HDR #Sicario
Sicario 4K HDR | Welcome To Juárez - 2160p 10bit HDR TrueHD 7.1 Atmos
An idealistic FBI agent (Emily Blunt) is assigned to work a dangerous stretch of the US-Mexico border by her superior officer (Josh Brolin). She's exposed to the brutality of the Mexican drug cartel, and becomes partners with a defector from the cartel (Benicio Del Toro) who possesses keen knowledge about the organization. As she gets deeper into the ruthlessness and corruption surrounding the FBI sting to find the organizations leaders, her moral and professional boundaries are pushed to their breaking point...
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Directed by : Denis Villeneuve
Written by : Taylor Sheridan
Produced by :
Basil Iwanyk
Edward L. McDonnell
Molly Smith
Thad Luckinbill
Trent Luckinbill
Starring :
Emily Blunt
Benicio del Toro
Josh Brolin
Cinematography : Roger Deakins
Edited by : Joe Walker
Music by : Jóhann Jóhannsson
Production
companies :
Black Label Media
Thunder Road
Distributed by : Lionsgate
Release date : May 19, 2015
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Lionsgate (2019)
Fair use.
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. - Кино
They're clearly not in Mexico theres no orange tint to everything
There's no taco either
This was filmed in El Segundo
This is why I hated Titanic.
That’s cd Juarez and it is absolutely true! believe me I’m from there ☝️
I’m from cd Juarez absolute reality… not even exaggerating
The cartel depicted here is like a phantom menace not really seen clearly anywhere but you feel it everywhere.
Exactly, not like the glorified American mafia. But they are actually relentless and have almost state like power.
This is actually how it feels to live in Mexico haha
@@laffetum3050 They might actually even be running the entire country covertly.
This is the most accurate depiction of cartels put to screen.
@@klutch8753 Might? They fuckin' are
What a great tourism promotional video of Juárez. Can't wait to bring my whole family there for a nice vacation!
Actually, this is coming to your neighborhood very soon courtesy of the Biden administration.
Meanwhile the US had over 400 gun deaths and over 22 confirmed mass shootings in the first 10 days of 2023
@@uekvowzkaebbzuvrgipqxhemmwbhe In a normal, non pandemic year, there will be more than 2,800,000 deaths in the USA per year. That’s slightly more than 7671 deaths per day, or close to one death per second. (In China, the number would be 5 times higher.) Interestingly, while the top 15 causes of death in the US account for roughly 85% of deaths, homicide (by any means) is not in that group which contains 13 diseases, accidents and suicide. Also interesting is that while all firearm deaths taken together are around 38,000, approximately 63% of those are suicides. The fact is in the US, you are far more likely to intentionally kill yourself with a gun than you are to be killed by someone else with a gun.
As for comparison to other countries, Mexico’s per capita murder rate at approx. 28 per 100,000 is much higher than that of the US at 6.9 per 100,000. Mexico ranks number 13 in the world for murder. It’s a violent place. Quoting (dubious) US numbers without regard for population is silly. And I can’t remember I’m my life a single time when decapitated bodies were hung from a bridge EVER here in the US. That shit happens in Mexico. (I lived there for three years as an employee of the State government in Toluca. As much as I like Mexico and the people, it’s a violent place.)
@@tinymotogarage Yes, Mexico is large and has one of the larger populations in the world. Nonetheless, it’s murder rate is high. That’s just the way it is. I wasn’t attacking Mexico - where I lived peacefully for three years - just pointing out to the person who attacked the US that his comparison was baseless.
When I lived there, things were relatively tranquil as most of the drug traffickers were in Colombia. That has changed. I travelled the country by car, bus and plane without incident, including to Monterrey, San Luis Potosi, Zacatecas, Córdoba, Oaxaca, Acapulco, Cuernavaca, the DF, etc. Times change and there is more violence there now. New York City was bad; it got better; and it’s getting bad again. I’m sure Mexico will change for the better.
@@clarino2 no, courtesy of the war on drugs.
To this day, I have never seen a movie build tension quite like this one. A Masterclass if there ever was one.
So, you’ve never seen Artie Lange’s Beer League?
@@tavolo22 no, but now I'm curious
@@tavolo22 that movie ain't all that
🤡
Yeah, the sequel was pretty bad, though
The logistics of many of these shots is so impressive. That aerial shot of them crossing the border, the various shots of the caravan, just beautiful.
Fun fact: the aerial shots are real but the helicopters and convoy are actually CGed in, it's a testament to the skill of effects artists these days that you don't even notice it.
@@brosefmalkovitch3121 dang, that is!
Now that I think of it, the CG in his later movies is similarly smooth.
@@brosefmalkovitch3121 The helicopters were pretty obviously CGI
@@Bobaklives its the wheels and the shadows that are most notable
Bit of a collage of the CGI construction in some scenes: ruclips.net/video/BSFb2F9fcmo/видео.html
Credit to Emily Blunt. She didn't say anything, but I can feel her feelings throughout the whole scene.
she is hot in this movie
She was like, “Crap. What did I sign myself up for?”
Most definitely..she be like .. Whoa shits about to get dark ..😳
She had no choice, it was in the script.
@@ccrider3435 i think his point was, " through only facial expressions and eye looks she is able to convey her role"
My father's brother (My uncle) actually served as a policeman around 2007, coincidentally when violence and crime was at an all time high, like crazy high (Side note I was born in that year). He rarely talks about his experience when he served there, and when he does, he puts such a gruesome scene for anyone who hears him out, the way he sees it and describes it is "Un autentico infierno".
here we go again , another made up youtube comment copy pasted from reddit
Authentic Hell, huh?
Did he ever fight the monster of 2007? That big ass C6500 with 2 bofors 40mm auto guns from Soviet Union?
Lo que vivimos en esos años, todos nosotros los niños que crecimos en esa época, i am a Calderón era children, I survived, many didn’t.
Ya lo dijo el buen Cochi
"Esta vida es el cabron infierno y no chingaderas"
Rarely do people mention the sound design of the two Sicario movies. The tension and dread the audio builds up is incredibly powerful.
Very accurate too, there's a scene where two shots are fired and you can hear the two individual clinks of the shell casings. Almost as if they fired a real gun.
The part shortly after this scene where the Delta guy takes Kate to the roof to show her all the tracer fire across Juarez reminds me of my first day in Fallujah in 2003. My unit had just returned from our deployment to Afghanistan when the Iraq invasion started. We came into Iraq a few months later, and were sent to take control of Fallujah. We arrived at our FOB on the outskirts of the city at night. I climbed a guard tower and asked the guards inside what Fallujah was like. One guard said to just watch in the direction of the city. A few moments later tracer fire started popping up everywhere and explosions sporadically. It was a pretty good indication of what the next 10 months would be. It still wasn’t even close to how intense the fighting was during my fifth combat tour when I was again in Kunar Province, Afghanistan. It was suuuuuper sporty.
Nothing but respect to you bro! Dudes like you have been through a lot of shit! Hope things are doing well for you👊👊
thank you for your service, sir.
right lively
5th tour? Damn that's an amazing service to your country. Your vast amount of experience surely helped out many of your cohorts with the lessons you've learned along the way. Amazing
No body asked you a damn thing
I was in Juarez in '16. Heard a lot of sirens outside my hotel in the night. Went for breakfast in the AM..overheard the servers muttering about how they got late to work because cops were everywhere... "All because of a couple of torsos on the pavement".
He wasn't kidding, smiling, lamenting. Just a casual remark. Almost as if what is a total horror for rest of us is like a trip to the mall for them except with decapitated bodies on a daily basis.
Sure you were.
@@bestreviews9666you think being in a city is some kind of rare feat? Have you ever left your basement?
That's horrifying...
@@bestreviews9666 I was mate. Murky details: I did find out who they were...low level enforcers for Sinaloa (cartel rivalry takes a new meaning ) these three were low level mules but cartels love to kidnap anyone at any level of their rivals and butcher them in a manner that makes ISIS look like My Little Ponies.
One of these three was a chef in the same hotel who was declared missing a few days ago. Which usually means a horrific death...
@@damienspectre4231Yep l agree, loved Mexico, met some beautiful there who are still friends to this day... 20 years on.
I found if you go look for that unique side in Mexico lt will find you very quickly.
Just enjoy the scenery and live.... Happy Days !
i will watch anything directed by Denis villeneuve after seeing these master piece movies
If you have not seen Prisoners , I highly recommend it. Hopefully it will be released in 4K soon.
Yup the mans last ten years- Prisoners-Sicario-Arrival-Blade Runner 2039-now doing his Dune Trilogy. SHEESH
Arrival
Seconding Arrival.
@@ApexClips4k can you please put F9 The Fast Saga in HDR clips please?
Sicario is a horror movie disguised as an crime thriller.
I just watched this the other day and was getting low key horror movie vibes, and I’ve seen this before but Ive only just noticed, the opening in AZ and this scene, the cartel is depicted like the bogeyman, something surreal and almost not of this earth, really spooky stuff
Nope just a movie that actually depicts how it is
Just a bad day in Juarez
Sad how it’s kinda happening recently with the hole border crises a whole ass shootout happened between the US National guard and presumedly the cartel and nobody outside of the American and Mexican military seem to care.
Drug trafficking as organized crime in Mexico is horror because it's known to have the most evil vibes to it, it's the nature of the business, that's the main reason why the drug business is called a cut throat business.
The fact that CGI is so blended so incredibly well with real footage just blows my mind. The Tahoe aerial shots, the choppers, the cityscape, the bodies hanging off the bridge, the armoured personnel carrier, look so real.
What parts of it are CGI?
@@natewilson7353 Emily Blunt's acting with those expressions
@@natewilson7353 a lot of the background are composite cgi shots
@@natewilson7353half of the black SUVs are CGI
The CGI is very well done, but the sound was lacking. They slapped onto the Blackhawks the same overused "chop chop" sound of a two bladed Huey. Four bladed helicopters sound much more consistent, like a giant fan.
What a good place to start a family. Decent public playground, enough law enforcement to keep order, good road, clean environment. Juarez 😍
Yeah! Just like your hole and your cultural level 😉
Or Los Angeles, Brooklyn, or Orlando! Because those are entirely definitive of ALL of the U.S. Or, or, maybe America isn't all like it's trashed cities the same way Mexico isn't all a slum. Look up Taxco, or Guanajuato
@@Codreanu_Prezent He didnt mention mexico. He just said Juarez.
but yeah i get what u saying man.
We need to give Mexico the china treatment and move all our manufacturing there.
We need Walmart and GM competing with Cartels, not the federal police.
Road was a Bit Bumpy, None of them Better not have Hemorrhoids or they might after that.
Bruh.... You prolly love in a shit hole somewhere in the shit hole middle east 🤦🏽
It is a shame Mexico is so corrupt, making it dangerous. Its a beautiful place with so many amazing people.
Gracias camarada
Every country in the world is unsafe and corrupt.
It benefits the US that there is always violence in Mexico because you think they have never stopped selling arms is a business for them and also drugs. Although they are very hypocritical, they blame Mexico for everything.
Mexicans probably saying the same things about us.
@@Nejourney78 Have you been to a place like Mexico City? Last time I was there I saw hundreds of thousands of people living in crates with tarps over the top of them.
There are so many elements of film-making that makes this 6 min. scene a timeless master-piece. Right from the aerial shots, accompanied by the haunting background music, to crossing the border and entering (perhaps) the most crime-infested places in the world, fully protected by armed police and yet not knowing whom to trust - this scene is a classic. They can't teach this in film school - you have to learn it from a Master, by working under him and observing. Classic.
Not so fun fact, the murder rate in New Orleans is higher than Juarez.
It has to be terrifying. Your surrounded by guns that are supposed to be on your side. But in reality, you don't know if they're on your side or if they're with the enemy, waiting to turn on you.
Is the US turning into Mexico?
+TheiTzCynical. As Josh Brolin warns Emily Blunt as they start their drive home: “Be careful of the _federales._ They’re not always the good guys."
@@Clipgathererdamn
*You're, not Your.
Love “ride along” scenes like this. Great for setting the tone and atmosphere of a given piece. This reminds me a lot of ‘The Coup’ in CoD 4. The mission where it puts you in the perspective of a Middle Eastern ruler being thrown in the back of the car and driven to your execution, and all you can do is watch out the window as the streets are rife with revolution. Remember being in awe when I first played that.
cod doesn’t make shit like that anymore, after ww2 cod got soft with their campaigns
@@8johh CoD doesn’t make shit like shit anymore. Just wish people would stop buying the fucking things so Activision can realize how far its head is stuffed up its own ass and make a good one for the first time in a decade.
@@8johh after black ops 2 they got soft
@@samuelmorgan6987How did they get soft? Could you explain?
@@8johhHow did they get soft? Could you explain?
This movie is something else. I don't know why they changed the director for the second part but this guy, the cinematography, bgm everything was on point. Especially this scene.
Because Denis Villeneuve wanted to make Arrival and Blade Runner 2049
@@InsightfulUndercurrents Too bad Blade Runner 2049 is a bland endurance test.
@@Selrisitai For you, not for Me and other people
The second one was just a leech movie taking money from the popularity of the first. it was completely unneeded which is why Villeneuve didn't do it - the story was done.
@@failtolawl That is true. Should have just left it as it was.
God Bless the Good Mexican soldiers fighting the cartels and corruption. Bravest of the BRAVE!
Can’t believe those guys are still fighting, and having to deal with what’s going on right now, Mexican special forces as well are one of the best fighters against the cartel as well
the fact that actual city is not suing a film is funny like they already accept the city as it is
Actually the mayor did call for a boycott saying that it gave it a bad name and Benicio responded that it was once that bad
If anything this movie downplayed how bad it is in countries like this.
That’s because it wasn’t filmed in Juarez
I had an ex who was from El Paso and her family told me that it used to be common to cross over to Juarez for a night out on the town, to go see a movie or go dancing. That it used to be no big deal for locals from either side to cross over just for the day and hang out. They are basically one big urban area, after all. The border is all that divides them. But one is a pretty safe city (relatively low crime rate for a major urban area), and the other has been in recent decades one of the all time murder capitols of the world.
A lot of people don't know that El Paso is actually a really low crime rate. People think it must be awful because of how close to Juarez it is, but its the total opposite.
@@anthonyr587because they get bussed up north, then start killing
@@ihatecheese623wrong El Paso is about 85% Mexican. The cartel in Juarez is a small percentage. Thousands of people cross back and forth every day.
@@joehernandez8941 A thing that people don't realize is that El Paso is largely ethnically similar (vast majority Mexican) to Juarez. Basically the same people, same place, same culture. Crazy what a border can do.
@@dasbubba841it's the same city. With a few notable exceptions
Incredible piece of filmmaking. In the cinema I was on the edge of my seat throughout the whole movie. My favourite movie of the 2010s.
stop talking some creepy shit
This movie sucked.
@@johndong7524 you suck
@@jeremymarquez3547 you swallow
@@johndong7524 you take it up the ass
The feeling of leaving civilization for the badlands, the fortress feeling of the fence, such a sense of foreboding. Then the sprawl of Juárez. Masterful. An amazing scene.
Except nothing of that sprawl is Juárez, wrong cars, wrong license plates, wrong everything.
@@toledini The organized sprawl is on the US side of the border as a contrast to Juarez
This wasn’t the opening scene
@@davidwujczyk3037 That's true. The opening scene for this chapter of the film I suppose.
@@toledini Interesting, do you know the location they used?
Camera work is just phenomenal. You feel everything thats going on.
The setup, the tension, the angles, this movie is a damn masterpiece.
4:55 This little bit of "admiration" for the cartels' tactics really sticks out to me. He is saying how their brutal methods allow them to keep some measure of control over a terrified populace but it was these exact practices that essentially conjured a demon in the form of Alejandro that will root them out and destroy them.
Who do you think they learned it from?
@@pashamarki1370 The Aztecs
The fact that they couldn't actually film the movie inside Juarez
Being someone who grew up in El Paso, I remember vividly when the cartel was a huge issue. I was only in elementary around 2013 and still my friends would talk about it. I even caught my parents worriedly talking about it in the kitchen one day. Shit was real.
Are they no longer so much of an issue?
@@eypxmwgovmifuon7808 to that extent, no. It’s always an “issue”, but not that prevalent.
@@MR_Edits03 Glad to hear it's getting better. Stay safe =)
too bad the CJNG still fucks it up, atrocities happens everyday
There is no return point, the narcos culture is too strong and embedded to the majority of the population now
El Paso was always safe when Juarez was plagued with violence. I remember every one I knew who crossed the border had to be extra careful during those years.
I also remember when this film came out it a lot of people here in EP was upset how the film portrayed the city.
I've seen a lot of horror movies, but no words have ever been more terrifying than "Welcome to Juàrez."
The fact that the threat is large enough for basically the entire local police to protect them is pretty damn terrifying
(Or to all be at the bridge murder)
Funny thing is they are afraid might get shot by American guns sold to cartels by USA . Research fast and furious under Obama and Biden administration. Ridiculous usa providing guns to cartels USA is the cartel .
It still is
you go there
That's not local police. That's the Federal Police and that was a small convoy compared to the tens of thousands of Mexican Federal Police officers
@@DeepThinker_6597or today "national guard"
From the Director of:
Incendies, Prisoner, Arrival, Blade Runner 2049, and Dune, one of my favorite Filmmaker of all time, Denis Villeneuve👏💙
Just an amazingly brilliant masterpiece of a film. I strongly recommend this film
Одна проблема - не дружит с логикой и здравым смыслом..🙂
Wow, Bottles really changed his life around after leaving prison.
I Wish Bottles Was featured more In Shot caller.
He was recruited straight out of prison. The CIA noticed he had a penchant for violence.
The mutilated corpses, the posters of the missing women, the absolute fear in the gangs and the police that are probably under their paycheck. If I had the power in my hands, I'd have more than half-a-mind to burn the whole damn thing to the ground.
If MAGA takes over, it’ll be like that. We’re a great country where people die to come here; MAGA hates the US and wants to tear it down.
It reminds me about all the missing indigenous women in the United States 🇺🇸:
@@i.ivanovich6946
Not even close to what happens in Mexico. You can’t even go out in broad daylight without getting murdered only place arguably worse was San Salvador in El Salvador with only one day without a murder until recently honestly every country should follow El Salvador’s example on how to deal with these sick animal that terrorize people like this.
Burn all of Mexico to the ground??? Don’t think I agree with that solution….
But you dont buddy lol
A true dichotomy. Bright colours, sunshine, pretty surroundings... Yet depressing, dangerous, lethal.
Where’s the pretty surrounding lol?
@@joesheridan9451 the combination of the colours, sunshine and people doing sports.
@@Vlamyncksken You have an extremely low standard for pretty surroundings lol
@@joesheridan9451 I don't live in such a place anymore but I grew up in a shit hole filled with genetic detritus
Those drivers were going crazy fast. They went from crossing the border into Ciudad Juárez to the metropolitan area of Mexico City in a blink of an eye
Nezahualcóyotl, Estado de México, actually 😀
Ciudad Neza?
Toros Neza?
CDMX1?1?1?1?1
how intense this scene is, still gives me chills
I love the part when the Federal police said, "The true sicarios are the friends we made along the way."
The best part of this movie is when the federal police said it’s sicario time and sicarioed all over those guys
@@iwonderwhatidoanymoreonyou4063 definitely one of the police movies out there in cinemas😭✋
Great film.
I listened to a podcast about the Femicides in Juarez about a year before the Narcos Mexico s3 came out which included a storyline about it. Still going on today. When the vans and police cars stop at the 5 minute mark there are posters of missing women on the wall.
The little details about this movie make it incredible.
And western press cares about Iranian women 😢
@@man-who-sold-the-world
As if American Women complain about made up problems like mansplaining or not toxic masculinity while in Iran they’re cutting off the heads of women for not wearing a hijab or Mexico cartel dudes skinning them alive and hanging them off bridges after raping them 1000x times
@@man-who-sold-the-world well let’s get started on how many Latin American migrants we take in and give preferential treatment to. We care too much
@strafer8764 not so much care you need immogrants . US citizens wont work the fields unless a gun to there heads or other important agricultural ans food service jobs. Its reality immigrants help in so many areas you didn't think but if excluded the US economy would collapse like it did in Alabama for 2 years
Also notice how benicios character fixes his glasses when he sees the posters- his character’s family were killed by the cartel
I've realized after rewatching this movie for the 99999th time, it must have been painful to sit there while the other guy was praising how "brilliant" what the cartel does about the mutilations and probably not knowing what Alejandro went thru.
Lived in El Paso for about 6 months in mid 2000s. Liked El Paso. Always an interesting feeling knowing a fence separates two universes. Know a lot of good people that live in Juarez.
Marty Robbins sang about El Pass.
Did u Try the chicos tacos lol.
Juarez is ok, to be honest its not that much worse than the US side
The music is naseously fantastic - tension is unreal - doom is coming - my favorite scene.
3:18.
He had his left hand on gun and right finger on the window button.
Because he still doesn’t trust his “side” or anyone.
Just noticed.
Just always on edge from seeing shit and being smart.
In that line of WORK ESSENTIAL 😮 4:10
if you noticed, the last body hanging from the freeway was a pregnant woman.
Maybe she just had too many tacos?
The colours look so different. I love it
This is so impressive and well done.. professional.. love it
I still remember the first time I ever saw Juarez. It looks better in the movie.
South Dallas TX
The movie is actually Mexico City. Juarez isn’t this sprawled.
As someone who's been stuck on a similar bridge from Mex to Cali I can vouch this shit DOES happen more than you'd like to believe
That music is like a heavy blanket over everything, suffocating all hope.
When I first watched this scene, it gave me awesome chills. I mean the whole film was just kick ass scene after kick ass scene. Budding the house of bodies at the start, this scene, the interrogation, the tunnels. But this scene, after they do the briefing. I knew this flick was one that I was going to remember. Shame tho I can still remember Sicario 2
Sometimes I wonder if Emily Blunt was acting during that scene, or if she was legit scared. such an underrated film. Still holding out hope they make a 3rd.
А что нет 3.жаль .но судя о прочитано м о добре нет и речи .
I heard that she had diarrhea during the filming. Made her look even more legitimately fearful.
A great actress. Her reactions, comportment and expressions are so realistic and believable. You can feel her character's nervousness, dismay and shock.
Same. I wish Sheridan would get to working on it.
I went with four friends from El Paso to have some beers at a bar in Juarez, but the bar pulled a fast one with the final bill falsely claiming we had lots of tequila shots and mixed drinks. All of us only drank beer, at most two or three beers each. The oldest guy in our group first pointed out to the server the inflated bill, but the worker quickly called over the manager, who insisted everything was correct. While my friend kept arguing about the bill, I noticed a guy sitting at the table to my right as he slowly pulled out a 1911 .45 caliber pistol and held it in his lap, eying our table. I whispered to my friend to forget the bill, that I would pay it. I also quietly whispered that the guy at the next table pulled out his gun during the argument. As soon as I paid, we all got the heck out of there. I wasn't about to get shot over a padded bill. I have never returned to Juarez since, and that was 30 years ago. It's too easy to get killed there.
That police escort scene just sends a different type of chills through your body
True. I can feel the Policia Federales coming inside me. Truly one of the movies ever made.
@@kolossis8283
Bro??????
@@localshithead7430😂😂😂
@@kolossis8283 gold
the background music for this movie is amazing
As someone who has lived in El Paso I can confirm that the ominous music starts to play as you are driving near Juarez
It's funny rewatching this movie now that I've lived in El Paso and can tell what is and isn't the local area of El Paso and Juarez.
Can you tell more about it?
It's funny when the are on 375 west along the border so you can get the bad ass glimpse of juarez through the fence but then in the next scene they are traveling 54 south to juarez because thats the route to the bridge.
@@jaycar82 Exactly!! That's what I was thinking. And then you get a glimpse of UTEP lol
The shots following from the air at a distance are fantastic.
Funny thing is they are afraid might get shot by American guns sold to cartels by USA . Research fast and furious under Obama and Biden administration. Ridiculous usa providing guns to cartels USA is the cartel .
Denis Villeneuve is a friken master. what an amazing movie
That whole Mexico scene is amazing, the best aerial shots in a movie ever and the border crossing scene one of the most realistic ever. Totall brilliant filming and planning of the shots.
One of the best filmed scenes of all time. So good!
This is a horror film from Emily blunts POV
This film is a masterpiece. Denis Villanueve is such a brilliant filmmaker.
Nice one, RUclips algorithm. I’ll rewatch this gem tonight.
I live here on Mexico, I can confirm that this is a daily thing everywhere
Pocho. No es así en todas partes. No en la ciudad principal. Ni en Guanajuato, ni en Taxco. Hay innumerables lugares donde no es así y ves que la cultura parece estancada sin tu habilidad para hablar español.
@@Codreanu_Prezent Yo me refiero a las ciudades, no a los pueblitos mágicos
@@DigitalChema pues usted dijo "everywhere" y eso no es verdad
@@DanielRamirez-zy3be prueba lo contrario :P
My condolences.
The music at beginning is similar to Mike Tyson's walk out music. That one droning bass note is chilling. Imagine hearing that one note as a boxer knowing that Tyson was walking out to the ring😮
Music and camera work, top notch
The discrepancy of cars entering Mexico vs cars coming into the us is alarming.
Lots of tourism amd so on
@@ishrendon6435 not much tourism going into Mexico, apparently
@@MikeSmith-ch7jv its because the US checks a lot to come in, while you literally just go into mexico with no one checking anything
That line to cross in Juarez to El Paso is fkn brutal in the day. At night it’s much easier
This 6 min, omg, what a masterpiece!!!, a timeless classic in movie history
I often wonder if the actors doing the scene have any idea of the weight and sheer perfection the end product will result in? The aerial shots, the way the camera swoops in, showing what seems to be unrelated things yet they all tie in together to make this magical composite whole. Truly a master filmmaker at work here.
Between 2014-2017 I had to travel to Mexico for work. Always flew into Mexico City then traveled elsewhere. I recall one trip during the El Chapo escape affair the Federales pickups with machine guns looked like in this scene at the turnpike. I recall driving through the toll booths with every machine gun trained on us. Absolutely surreal. So glad I’m retired and do not have to go there any longer, it is a cess pool.
Love how the Tahoe’s are cruising 😅 what a film
There are no microbuseros in Juárez. They filmed in some parts of Juárez, but others in México city. Min. 6:28, look at the green micro (public transport in CDMX)
what a great an intense sequence. The sound on the background made this scene so powerfull.
Am I the only one that loved the music before anything even happened?❤
3:28 How the hell did these cops stay on the trucks instead of being catapulted into the air? Did someone weld them onto the vehicles?
Their guns.
It's how they are positioned.
Brass balls held them in check.
Low center of gravity. Mexicans are short and fat.
Tie downs
The musical score really makes it what it is
The soundtrack never fails to give me goosebumps
This movie slaps so hard
One of my favorite drama crime thriller movies of 2010s with intense story, great characters, top of acting and the music theme is completely badass.
The shootout scenes are looks real and the violence in this movie is fucking brutal.
I love that damn soundtrack. You don't even have to watch the movie to know something terrible's coming... like an unseen beast crawling towards you...
most amazing thriller so far
The scene where they're driving through las almas in MWII is this scene almost beat for beat, down to the "narcomantas". Cool to see games take inspiration from modern military movies like this
This game came out after mw2
The music score to this movie is amazing.
In all my years of movie watching, never have I seen a movie that establishes such a strong sense of dread and anxiety in a setting as this movie did. The booming drawl of the score, like the growling of a beast so vast you can drive right on its body. There’s no violence happening in the scene (only the grotesque aftermath of it), but you can just feel the tension of everyone in that squad car as they cross into the city limits, like they know they’ve crossed into an alternate dimension where the very basics of justice and human decency no longer exist. A land of wolves, rarely seen but always lurking, always hunting for their next slab of fresh, naive meat. They have the firepower of an entire police department watching their six (plus their own weapons), but even that isn’t enough to make any of them feel safe. The only one who looks at ease is Alejandro, and that’s because he was a wolf himself and had no regard for his own life anymore, which made him all the more dangerous.
Those bodies are burned in my memory. In some ways that was worse than the bodies in the house. The indignity and degradation.
The scoring in this movie is underrated 🔥
This movie is epic. The attention to detail, the script, acting, character development, etc.
Living in El Paso, it was so cool to see this scene and recognize everything, even have driven on the road they’re driving on
Production staff felt safer in Mexico City than Ciudad Juarez. Shit is real
3:54 the ammo box is just for show apparently
12.7mm ammo for a gun that fires 5.56 sweet!
What are y’all talking about? That’s a m240 gun it fires 7.62mm
@@Brownie.- you right. Still has 12.7 hangin off the side
@@Brownie.-thats not a m240 thats a M249 that fires 5.56. Also its loaded wrong.
That's an M249. They shoot 5.56 but the ammo box is for 7.62. There's clearly ammo in the box, it's just not full. The biggest problem is the ammo isn't even fed into the gun, instead it's draped over it. The second problem is that's clearly not 5.56. I can excuse a not full box of ammo, even the wrong kind because you can always keep 5.56 in a 7.62 box if you really wanted to, but to have it on top of the gun instead of in it is hilarious.
Love how they have the trucks bouncing over the TOPES just like in MEX!
The Jaurez Music always get me going into these movies. Its perfectly terrifying.....
The tension all throughout this movie, man. Adrenaline for hours, and after it's over, hooooof...
I’ll never complain about my rush hour commute again…
The most iconic scene in the movie history!
Thanks
Part 1 was way better than part 2.
I really like how the Policía Federal are portrayed in thia scene, and the Mexican authorities in general.
They're fighting a losing battle, but the Americans still treat them as equal partners to be trusted.
Would have been very easy to write the scene with the Mexican authorities as blundering or incompetent, but glad Sheridan didn't go that route.
The intensity just really takes you in