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Loving Pablo
Overlook Pick

Loving Pablo

A gangster. A princess. The true story of a most unlikely love affair.
63
User Score1,046 ratings
TMDB 6.316+20172h 3mSpanish
CrimeDrama

Synopsis

The film chronicles the rise and fall of the world's most feared drug lord Pablo Escobar and his volatile love affair with Colombia's most famous journalist Virginia Vallejo throughout a reign of terror that tore a country apart.

Director
Fernando León de AranoaFrom TMDB credits
Studio
B2Y EOOD4 production companies
Release
December 14, 2017Released
Box Office
$18MBudget $5M

Top Cast

8 of 81
Javier Bardem
Javier Bardem
Pablo Escobar
Penélope Cruz
Penélope Cruz
Virginia Vallejo
Peter Sarsgaard
Peter Sarsgaard
Shepard
Julieth Restrepo
Julieth Restrepo
Maria Victoria Henao
Óscar Jaenada
Óscar Jaenada
Santoro
David Valencia
David Valencia
Santos
Mark Basnight
Mark Basnight
Family Man
Joavany Alvarez
Joavany Alvarez
Ignacio Velarde

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
tmdb28039023
Aug 29, 2022

A caption at the beginning of Loving Pablo informs us that “This film is inspired by real events. Some of the characters, names, and events have been fictionalized for dramatic purposes." What they don't tell us is that even the protagonists’ nationalities and languages have been changed. Colombians Pablo Escobar and Virginia Vallejo are played by Spanish actors speaking English – or, at the very least, trying to; Javier Bardem's English is atrocious and Penelope Cruz's is abominable, and their Colombian accents are just as bad, if not worse. To confuse things further, the characters occasionally say some random words or phrases in Spanish. Now, I don't think it's asking too much of the audience to pretend that the characters are speaking Spanish among themselves even as the actors deliver their lines in English; after all Hemingway did something similar in For Whom the Bell Tolls. But if the characters are supposed to be speaking in their native language, shouldn’t they sound like native speakers? Also, the dialogue should be consistent; i.e., all English all the time – because otherwise, what language are they supposed to be speaking when they say something in Spanish? This is a Spanish film, about Spanish-speaking characters, written, produced and directed by Spaniards; why they felt the need to tell their story in any other language than that of Cervantes, I haven’t the foggiest. Except, of course, for the obvious reason of appealing to the Anglo-Saxon market, but in this case why go to the trouble of getting Spanish – especially big names like Bardem and Cruz – and Colombians actors, only to force them to recite most of their dialogue in English? If nothing else, they could have at least had the decency not to have Cruz narrate the movie.

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