The Perfect Dictatorship
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| The Perfect Dictatorship | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Spanish: La dictadura perfecta | |
| Directed by | Luis Estrada |
| Written by |
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| Produced by | Luis Estrada |
| Starring |
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| Cinematography | Javier Aguirresarobe |
| Edited by | Mariana Rodríguez |
| Music by | Benson Taylor |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Bandidos Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 143 minutes |
| Country | Mexico |
| Language | Spanish |
| Box office | over US$14 million (Mexico) |
The Perfect Dictatorship (Spanish: La dictadura perfecta) is a 2014 Mexican black comedy political satire film, written, produced and directed by Luis Estrada and starring Damián Alcázar, Alfonso Herrera, Joaquín Cosío, Dagoberto Gama, María Rojo and Salvador Sánchez. Cast also includes Osvaldo Benavides, Saúl Lisazo, Tony Dalton, Arath de la Torre, Sergio Mayer and Itatí Cantoral. It was released on October 16, 2014, and represented Mexico at the 2015 Goya Awards.[1][2]
The film title is a reference to a famous statement by Peruvian Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa that he used to describe the continuous governments of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), which dominated politics in Mexico for much of the 20th century.[3] The plot is loosely based on the real life perceived Televisa controversy, which consisted of Mexican citizens heavily perceiving the news media was unfairly favoring PRI candidate Enrique Peña Nieto during the 2012 presidential election in Mexico.[4]
Plot
[edit]The President of Mexico (based on Enrique Peña Nieto) is accepting the credential cards of the new United States Ambassador. During his speech, he suggests to the ambassador that he tell President Barack Obama that he should consider allowing more Mexicans into the country as they can do jobs that "even black people didn't want." This causes a stir on social media, with millions of ordinary citizens posting and spreading memes about him.

Later that day, officers of the Mexican government urge Television Mexicana, the most powerful television corporation, to create a media distraction by disclosing a scandalous story involving Governor Carmelo Vargas by showing a video where the governor is accepting bribes from drug lords so the public turn their attention from the presidential situation.
Governor Vargas decides to negotiate with Televisión Mexicana to clean his image as he addresses that its stellar newscast is the only news source where the Mexican public can rely more than the internet or other TV shows.
TV MX's news producer Carlos Rojo and star reporter Ricardo Diaz are sent to meet Vargas in an effort to improve his state's reputation. After being received by members of a drug cartel sent by the governor to protect them, Rojo meets a leader of the opposition party, Agustin Morales, who invites him to Congress where he delivers a speech calling for the governor's resignation. However, during the speech, Morales is nearly assassinated. The group struggles to find positive news to uplift Vargas' image.
Meanwhile, Ana and Elena Garza, two twins, are kidnapped when their nanny is distracted. The information goes to the state police and TV MX decides to cover the situation in the newscast by making the parents of the children, Lucia and Salvador, sign a contract to ensure that they only provide information to TV MX while Carmelo Vargas sent some detectives to fake some interest in the case. The case obtains high television ratings while simultaneously hiding all the problems in Vargas' government.
Recovered from the attempt on his life, Agustin Morales obtains contracts between TV MX with the governor from the Governor's godson. Morales blackmails Rojo into allowing him 10 minutes on the newscast to present his evidence of governmental corruption. However, the president's staff find evidence implicating Morales in child sexual abuse, and this is presented live on the channel before he can speak about his corruption allegations. Enraged by this, Morales physically attacks the news host and is removed from the studio. Later that night in his hotel, Morales is killed, with his death framed as a suicide by both the government and TV MX. Meanwhile, Vargas learns about what his spokesman did, so he personally kills his godson in front of Carlos.
When a witness recognizes who kidnapped the children, TV MX changes their strategy and begin in the newscast to ask the people to crowdfund the ransom the kidnappers are asking, with the governor himself donating a high sum (in exchange for being able to date Jazmin, Rojo's current girlfriend). However, Doña Chole, a member of the kidnappers, decides to bring the twins to the police and the Garza family decides to not give any more interviews to TV MX, leaving their reporting unfinished. So TV MX decides to make a fake montage over an operation of the government to rescue the girls and finally give the ending the people wanted to see, portraying Vargas as a hero and the Garza family supporting his heroic actions.
The next day, Díaz becomes the host of the newscast and Rojo is given an executive position at the news agency. Vargas decides to run for president while marrying Jazmin.
Two years later, Vargas wins the 2018 Mexican presidential election, under a coalition of three formerly opposed parties- the PRI, PAN and PRD.
Cast
[edit]
- Damián Alcázar as Governor Carmelo Vargas
- Alfonso Herrera as Producer Carlos Rojo
- Joaquín Cosío as Congressman Agustín Morales
- Osvaldo Benavides as Ricardo Díaz
- Silvia Navarro as Lucía de Garza
- Flavio Medina as Salvador Garza
- Saúl Lisazo as TV MX news anchor
- Tony Dalton as Director of TV MX (Pepe)
- Salvador Sánchez as X Man
- Enrique Arreola as Government Secretary
- Arath de la Torre as Speaker Poncho
- Dagoberto Gama as Mexico's Attorney General
- Noé Hernández as Chief of Security
- Sonia Couoh as Nana
- María Rojo as Doña Chole
- Luis Fernando Peña as El Chamoy
- Gustavo Sánchez Parra as El Charro
- Sergio Mayer as the President of Mexico
- Hernán Mendoza as El Mazacote
- Livia Brito as Jazmín
- Itatí Cantoral as Lucrecia Lascuráin
- Roger Cudney as Ambassador of the United States
Themes and analysis
[edit]The plot of the film satirizes numerous political events which had happened in Mexico during the time period.
- Contracts between Televisa and PRI-PVEM: After the video scandals, Carmelo Vargas asks Televisión Mexicana (TV MX) for help in cleaning up his image and running for president. The corresponding contracts for this agreement are leaked, and Congressman Agustín Morales tries to make them public. In real life, similar contracts between Televisa and the campaign of Enrique Peña Nieto were leaked by The Guardian.[5]
- The Paulette Gebara Farah case: TV MX decides to use the kidnapping of the Garza couple's daughters as a smokescreen, giving full coverage to cover up the attempted assassination of Morales and other crimes committed by Governor Vargas. This part was fictionally adapted to discuss the case of Paulette Gebara Farah, a sensationalized kidnapping case with many gaps during the judicial process and an implausible verdict. Like its film counterpart, the trial was continuously covered by the company Televisa. In the film, this process is known as “La Caja China” (The Chinese Box).
- Angélica Rivera: In order to collect the ransom money for the Garza family's daughters, the governor secretly asks the producer for a favor. Towards the end of the film, we see Governor Vargas campaigning for the presidency, accompanied by Jazmín, the star of a soap opera on the channel. She previously had a romantic relationship with producer Carlos Rojo, where apparently, both were already married. This reflects the image of actress Angélica Rivera, first with her marriage to producer Jose Alberto Castro, and later with her second marriage to President Enrique Peña Nieto.
- Video scandals: In the film, Governor Carmelo Vargas is seen receiving money from “El Mazacote,” an alleged drug trafficker. This parallels the video that was shown on El Mañanero on March 3, 2004, in which René Bejarano is seen receiving wads of cash in a briefcase from Argentine businessman Carlos Ahumada.
- Ya ni los negros: This phrase was used by Vicente Fox during his administration. As in the film, it caused a stir because it was considered a racist comment.
- “Unidos por México” electoral alliance: During Carmelo Vargas' presidential campaign ad, the symbols of the PRI, PAN and PRD are shown. Curiously, six years after the film's release, the Va por México alliance was formed by these same three main parties for the 2021 Mexican legislative election and subsequent 2024 Mexican general election.
Reception
[edit]The film has grossed over MXN$188.16 million in Mexico, making it the eighth highest-grossing Mexican film of all time.[6][7]

Awards and nominations
[edit]Ariel Awards
[edit]The Ariel Awards are awarded annually by the Mexican Academy of Film Arts and Sciences in Mexico. La Dictadura Perfecta received 10 nominations.[8]
| Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | La Dictadura Perfecta | Best Picture | Nominated |
| Luis Estrada | Best Director | ||
| Best Original Screenplay | |||
| Jaime Sampietro | |||
| Santiago Núñez, Pablo Lach and Hugo de la Cerda | Best Sound | ||
| Mariana Rodríguez | Best Film Editing | ||
| Salvador Parra | Best Art Direction | ||
| Felipe Salazar | Best Makeup | ||
| Mariestela Fernández | Best Costume Design | ||
| Alejandro Vázquez | Best Special Effects | ||
| Adriana Arriaga | Best Visual Effects |
References
[edit]- ^ Caballero, Jorge (15 October 2014). "Se estrena 'La dictadura perfecta', una mirada a las entrañas del poder". La Jornada. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
- ^ "Selección para los premios Goya 2015". El Universal. 12 September 2014. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
- ^ "Vargas Llosa: "México es la dictadura perfecta"". La Jornada. 2 December 2013. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
- ^ Times, Los Angeles (3 November 2014). "Mexican filmmaker Luis Estrada's satirical agenda hits home". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "Televisa affair: the 'Handcock' document".
- ^ Scott Roxborough (2014-12-22). "Box Office: 8 International Hits That Challenged the Studio Tentpoles". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2014-12-22.
- ^ "Las 10 cintas mexicanas más taquilleras". Milenio. Grupo Milenio. 31 May 2016. Retrieved 2 January 2019. In Spanish.
- ^ "Lista completa de nominaciones a los premios Ariel 2015" (in Spanish). Morelia International Film Festival. April 13, 2015. Retrieved October 20, 2016.