ABSTRACT

Charting production, distribution, censorship, and reception, this book examines Y Tu Mamá También in its presentation as a journey of self-discoveries.

Three young adults enjoy a road trip together in search of a legendary beach. Behind their stories are mythologies of youth, a network of ideas in the film that reflects life outside the theaters. The deceptively complex film leaves the characters and its viewers with, instead of oversimplified and hollow answers, provocative questions and existential concerns. Made independently in Mexico, the film crosses over transnational issues, global markets, and mainstream and alternative aesthetics. It transforms road movie and youth film genres and shows a ‘musical, magical’ Mexico to the world. This book synthesizes several approaches in order to extensively examine Y Tu Mamá También. Covering the film’s production history, its distribution and censorship, and larger industrial, political, and cultural contexts, this book analyzes the too-often overlooked aspects of youthful sexuality alongside figurations of maturity, rites of passage, and covenants—made, broken, and remade—that not only inform representations of identity but also complicate the processes of identity formation themselves.

chapter 1|8 pages

Aspirations

chapter 2|13 pages

Creativity

chapter 3|16 pages

Originality

chapter 4|6 pages

‘The Charolastra Manifesto’

chapter 5|15 pages

Maturity

chapter 6|15 pages

Sex

chapter 7|12 pages

Development

chapter 8|11 pages

Sex (It Bears Repeating)

chapter 9|8 pages

‘Mí Manifiesto’

chapter 10|10 pages

Ecstasy

chapter 11|3 pages

Pranganeando