Tortilla Heaven | |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Directed by | Judy Hecht Dumontet |
Produced by | Courtney Mizel Jose M. Iturralde Judy Hecht Dumontet Gilbert Dumontet |
Screenplay by | Judy Hecht Dumontet Julius Robinson |
Story by | Mitchell Leib |
Starring | José Zúñiga Elpidia Carrillo Alexis Cruz Olivia Hussey Judy Herrera Lupe Ontiveros Del Zamora Irene Bedard George Lopez Deborah Chavez Miguel Sandoval |
Cinematography | Chuy Chávez |
Editing by | Rick Fields Hiroshi Kubota Vanick Moradian |
Distributed by | Archangel Releasing |
Release date(s) | March 16, 2007(United States) |
Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Tortilla Heaven is an independent comedy film written and directed by Judy Hecht Dumontet. It was first released in theaters on March 16, 2007 in Los Angeles.[1]
Contents |
A tiny town in New Mexico is turned upside down when the image of Christ appears - burned onto a tortilla - in the community's only restaurant, "Tortilla Heaven." Chaos ensues among the townfolk.
The film was received mixed reviews from the press. Film critic Brandon Fibbs wrote, "Inspired, incredibly, by a true story, Tortilla Heaven is a modern-day fable, a sort of biblical parable couched in comedy. While a fable is an amusing and compelling way to relate a story with a serious point, Tortilla Heaven at times undermines its message by stretching the comedy to its limits. An over-the-top courtroom battle and a child custody fight with a nudist hermit veer the film into the realm of the absurd far too often. Tortilla Heaven comes very close to becoming a parody of the true movie the filmmakers wanted to make. Tortilla Heaven is a low-budget, independent production, and, most of the time, it looks the part. For every bit of genuinely beautiful cinematography, there is another sloppy, amateur-hour moment."[2]
Critic Justin Chang, critic for Variety, wrote, "Pic's almost exclusively Latino and Native American cast is mostly reduced to playing folksy caricatures, feverishly crossing themselves and peppering their Mexican-accented English with the odd exclamation in Spanish. But give some of the women credit: Olivia Hussey adds some loopy fun as a cow-milking nudist, while Lupe Ontiveros brings her usual brash attitude to bear on the role of a lecherous and overbearing mother-in-law. Production as a whole feels disjointed and thrown together for reasons that become all too clear in light of the film's 14 credited producers. Incidentally, the real-life "Holy Tortilla" legend hails from Lake Arthur, N.M., where the first (but certainly not the last) culinary manifestation of Jesus' face was reported in 1977. But after Tortilla Heaven, auds won't be praying for a Second Coming."[3]
Nomination