J-ok'el | |
---|---|
Directed by | Benjamin Williams |
Produced by | Juan Carlos Arizmendi Paola Madrazo del Río Andrés Rodríguez Franco Benjamin Williams |
Written by | Jeremy Svenson Peter Theis Andy Whitaker |
Starring | Dee Wallace-Stone Tom Parker Ana Patricia Rojo Diana Bracho Jesús Ochoa Angelique Boyer |
Music by | George Shaw |
Cinematography | Andrew Waruszewski |
Editing by | Slater Dixon |
Distributed by | Maverick Entertainment Group |
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | Mexico |
Language | Spanish |
Budget | $500,000 USD |
J-ok'el is a Mexican thriller of 2007, directed by Benjamin Williams. Who deviated from the usual stories about spirits showing an ending where the good guy do not always win and many lit environments, in a narrative designed to surprise connoisseurs of the genre. This film is William's debut.[1]
Contents |
An american man travels to a small town in Chiapas, Mexico called San Cristobal de las Casas, to help his mother when he know that his stepsister has been abduced. Everything indicates that it is a wave of kidnappings attributed to the legendary J-ok'el (Weeping Woman). Woman who drowned her children ever ago and whose spirit has returned to take other children and thus forget their own suffering.[2]
The film won gold medal for best music in the Park City Film Festival in Park City, Utah.[3]
J-ok'el means "weeping woman" in Tzotzil dialect.
Budget was $500,000 USD.
Music written and conducted by George Shaw[4]