Instructions Not Included

Instructions Not Included
Directed by Eugenio Derbez
Produced by Mónica Lozano
Written by Guillermo Ríos
Leticia López Margalli
Eugenio Derbez
Starring
Music by Carlo Siliotto
Cinematography Martín Boege
Andrés León Becker
Edited by Carlos Bolado
Santiago Pérez Rocha León
Production
company
Alebrije Cine y Video
Fulano, Mengano y Asociados
Distributed by Pantelion Films
Release dates
  • 30 August 2013 (United States)
Running time
122 minutes
Country Mexico
Language Spanish
English
Budget $5 million
Box office $99,067,206[1]

Instructions Not Included (original Spanish title: No se aceptan devoluciones, literally No Returns Accepted) is a 2013 Mexican comedy-drama film co-written, directed by, and starring Eugenio Derbez.[2][3]

Plot

Valentín Bravo had been always a rather fearful child, afraid of everything from heights to spiders. His father, Juan "Johnny" Bravo, raised him trying to make him fearless by making a tarantula walk on Valentin and throwing him off a high oceanside cliff known as La Quebrada. When his father locked Valentín in a crypt at a cemetery, Valentín began to resent his father and ran away after stating that he no longer loves him.

Valentín grows up to be Acapulco's local playboy and sleeps with every tourist that crosses his path. One day a former fling named Julie shows up at his doorstep with a baby girl, claiming that she is his daughter. Julie leaves the baby with Valentín after asking him for cab fare, but she doesn't come back. After receiving a phone call from Julie in which she says she is not prepared to raise a child, Valentín races to the airport to try to return the baby to Julie but fails to catch up to her before she boards her flight to Los Angeles.

Valentín leaves Acapulco with the baby, Maggie, and hitchhikes across Mexico toward Tijuana. After being turned back at the US border, he crosses by being smuggled in a hidden compartment in a transport truck along with numerous other Mexicans. Going only by a single photo of Julie in which a Los Angeles hotel is visible in the background, Valentín visits the hotel to track down Julie. However, when Maggie wanders to a nearby pool, Valentín ends up jumping out of a hotel presidential suite into the pool 10 stories below, rescuing his daughter. A movie director witnesses this event and hires Valentín as a stuntman — a job which Valentín accepts since he believes it is only way he can support Maggie.

An unlikely father figure, Valentín raises Maggie for six years, giving her a happy, fun, and carefree home. Meanwhile he also establishes himself as one of Hollywood's top stuntmen to pay the bills, with Maggie acting as his on-set coach and translator as Valentín still doesn't know any English. As Valentín raises Maggie, she forces him to grow up too in his large fears, though he does it only for her own fun. Meanwhile during a visit to the doctor in which he receives an injection, the doctor confides in Valentín — with Maggie out of earshot — that the treatments aren't working. To hide from Maggie the fact that her mother abandoned her, Valentín writes weekly letters to Maggie from her, detailing various adventures and feats around the world to explain her absence. But Maggie wishes to meet her mother, so Valentín goes to his director, and looks for an actress to play "Julie". Before the casting is complete, Valentín gets a call from Julie saying that she is in Los Angeles and wants to meet.

Julie tries to be a part of Maggie's life again, along with her girlfriend Renee who she lives with in New York, but after a tearful departure at the airport Julie realizes she doesn't want to just see Maggie during visits and holidays. She files for custody and cites Valentín's dangerous job and lack of English skills as reasons that he is unfit to raise Maggie. Valentín's sincerity and the story of his daring ten-story jump convince the judge that he has Maggie's best interest at heart, and he awards custody to Valentin as he is the only parent she has really known. Not backing down, Julie asks for a DNA test which proves Valentín isn't the father after all. Valentín ends up losing legal custody of Maggie, but they sneak away and decide to go back to Acapulco where he reunites with his friends, although he discovers that his father died a few years ago.

Julie and Renee threaten Valentín's director to bully him into revealing Valentín's location, who repeatedly claims he doesn't know where the father and daughter are. Eventually he relents and states that Valentín has woken up every day not knowing if it would be the last day he would see his daughter, but the details are not revealed on-screen. Julie finds Valentín and Maggie on the beach and has surprisingly dropped her attempts to gain custody. Instead, the three enjoy time together as a family in Acapulco while in a voice-over Valentín narrates how doctors can sometimes discover a heart defect for which there is no cure and which could kill the patient any time. As Valentín and Julie sit on the beach with Maggie falling asleep in Valentín's lap, Maggie peacefully passes away, which reveals that she, not Valentín, was the one with the heart defect.

One year later, we see Valentín walking down the beach, with a dog but without Julie, narrating that he now understands his father's motives in wanting to prepare him for the future and give him the courage to face his fears. The film concludes with a vision of Maggie playing in heaven with her grandfather.

Cast

Reception

Box office

Instructions Not Included grossed $7,846,426 from 347 theaters in its opening weekend in the United States,[2] making it the fifth highest-grossing film of the 2013 Labor Day weekend.[4] The film "shattered box office records" and became the "highest-grossing Spanish-language film to open in North America," and by the second weekend the number of theaters showing the film doubled. As of October 2014, the film had grossed $44,467,206 in North America, making it the highest-grossing Spanish-language film and the fourth highest-grossing foreign film all time in United States, along with grossing $99,067,206 worldwide.[1]

In Mexico, the movie has a record-breaking $11,500,000 from 2,755 screens on its opening weekend, making it the highest-grossing opening for a Mexican film of all time, doubling the record set by El Crimen del Padre Amaro of $5,500,000. In the second week it got around $9,350,000 to retrieve the first place, accumulating around $27,000,000 and making itself the highest-grossing Mexican film of all time by breaking the records of 2013 film Nosotros los Nobles of $26,250.000.

At the end of 2013, Instructions Not Included ended with a sum of $46,103,013, consolidating as the third highest grossing movie of the year in Mexico, just below Despicable Me 2 and Iron Man 3.[5]

Critical response

Joe Leydon of Variety described Instructions Not Included as "sporadically amusing but unduly protracted."[3] He also wrote: "Derbez and Peralta develop a sweetly effective chemistry in their scenes together ... Unfortunately, the supporting players are all too often encouraged to overplay, with decidedly mixed results."[3]

Website "Reviews And The City" rated the film three stars out of five, in its own terms. Critic said: "One has suffered many pretensions, From Harmony Korine with “Trash Humpers” to the mediocrity of Jean-Luc Godard or bizarre metaphors in unbearable films like “Only God Forgives”, So why not forgive “Instructions Not Included”? Here there are many ideas not always well done on time or contradict other ideas, but when the film wants to run is passable. It’s a film that has so shallow ( like a TV drama) that if you are demanding you’d hate this, but after all there are fairly good things in this bizarre, very bizarre production"[6]

Accolades

YearAwardCategoryRecipient(s)ResultRef.
2013People's Choice AwardsFavorite Comedic MovieNominated
2014Young Artist AwardBest Leading Young Actress in a Feature FilmLoreta PeraltaWon[7]
Best Supporting Young Actress in a Feature FilmLaura KrystineNominated

References

External links