National Mechanics Explained

National Mechanics
Director:Luis Alcoriza
Country:Mexico
Language:Spanish

National Mechanics (Spanish:Mecánica nacional) is a 1972 Mexican comedy film filmed in May 1971 with locations near the free highway to Cuernavaca, and directed and written by Luis Alcoriza. It was released in Mexico City on December 28, 1972.[1] [2]

Synopsis and TV sequel

An owner of a mechanic's shop who is a car racing enthusiast (Manolo Fábregas) goes to attend one of the races in the company of his family and friends. Among the excesses, the commotion and chaotic partying, he is cheated on by his wife (Lucha Villa), his daughter (Alma Muriel) has sex with the groom, and his mother, the grandmother of the family (Sara García), dies from stomach congestion.

A sequel was made in 1972 as a television series starring David Reynoso and Lucha Villa, and it ran for only a few episodes. It was titled Telemecánica nacional (National Telemechanics in English). The cast was completed by Nubia Martí and Jorge Ortiz de Pinedo. In the first chapter, the family came with the corpse of the grandmother. Since they had taken her sitting in the car, she was in a stiff position unable to straighten her up, so they did all manner of things to fit her body in the coffin.

Release

The film was released in Mexico City a year and a half after it was shot. It was ranked 74th on the list of the 100 best Mexican films, according to the opinion of 25 critics and film specialists in Mexico, as published by Somos magazine in July 1994.[3]

Release history

International publication date
CountryTitleDate
Mecánica nacionalDecember 28, 1972
Mécanique nationaleJanuary 8, 1975
Mecánica nacionalJanuary 28, 1977
Autós hétvégeOctober 27, 1977 (Filmmúzeum)
March 1978

Awards

Ariel Awards

The Ariel Awards are awarded annually by the Mexican Academy of Film Arts and Sciences in Mexico. Mecánica Nacional received five awards out of 10 nominations.[4]

|-|rowspan="10" scope="row"| 15th Ariel Awards|scope="row"| Mecánica Nacional
(tied with El Castillo de la Pureza and Reed, México Insurgente)|scope="row"| Best Picture| |-|scope="row"| Luis Alcoriza|scope="row"| Best Direction| |-|scope="row"| Lucha Villa|rowspan="1" scope="row"| Best Actress| |-|scope="row"| Héctor Suárez|rowspan="1" scope="row"| Best Supporting Actor| |-|scope="row"| Gloria Marín|rowspan="1" scope="row"| Best Supporting Actress| |-|rowspan="2" scope="row"| Luis Alcoriza|rowspan="1" scope="row"| Best Original Screenplay| |-|scope="row"| Best Original Story| |-|scope="row"| Carlos Savage|rowspan="1" scope="row"| Best Editing| |-|scope="row"| Manuel Fontanals|rowspan="1" scope="row"| Best Scenography| |-

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Mora p.120
  2. Web site: Mecánica Nacional: Una mirada a la idiosincrasia mexicana . es . Retuécano . April 5, 2017 . July 9, 2022.
  3. Web site: Las 100 mejores películas del cine mexicano . January 23, 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100208075046/http://cinemexicano.mty.itesm.mx/pelicula1.html . February 8, 2010 .
  4. News: XV 1973 — Ganadores y nominados. 1973. May 24, 2016. Asociación Mexicana de Artes y Ciencias Cinematográficas. Spanish. https://web.archive.org/web/20160616182320/http://v1.academiamexicanadecine.org.mx/ver_ariel.asp?anio=XV+1973&tipo=anio. June 16, 2016. dead.