Llámenme Mike (1979) Poster

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7/10
Mickey Spillane's Natural Son
EdgarST1 May 2012
Everything you have read about "Llámenme Mike" is true. A satirical comedy, it stars Alejandro Parodi as Miguelito, a gray Mexican policeman. He is the dumbest of a quartet of officers who take advantage of the drug traffic in Mexico City, maybe the less corrupt of the four and surely the one with the kindest heart, who accepts to go to jail to protect his pals and calm down the angry Chief of Police, who wants to put an end to the drug dealings and killings in the city (a situation that Luis Estrada could have dreamed of before making "El inferno").

Mike is also addicted to Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer novels: when he is badly beaten by all the inmates that he had sent precisely to prison, a surgeon performs a "bionic" operation and when he opens his eyes he is no longer Miguelito but Mike (Hammer). From then on he speaks in English every now and then, and he is determined to free Mexico from a Communist conspiracy. He mixes names, mistakes joints for clandestine meeting places, and believes the drug king is "Mr. Red" himself. Although it was made in the late 1970s and in spite of the disappearance of Socialist Europe, the movie still functions as a satire of our paranoid times.

Made with a very low budget, and without any pretensions, it has become a cult favorite in spite of all the problems it confronted. When the head of Mexican film industry, Margarita López Portillo, saw it she said it was the most terrible movie she had ever seen, although she was the mind behind the superlatively awful John Reed biography "Red Bells", directed by Sergei Bondarchuk. But she was the chief and sent "Llámenme Mike" to the vaults for a couple of years. Then, to avoid any accusation of anti-democratic practices, the film was finally released... in Easter weekend and with very little promotion. "Llámenme Mike" would win several Ariel awards (for best actor, story and screenplay), and doña Marga became the sister-in-law of the voluptuous leading lady of the film, Sasha Montenegro (widow of José López Portillo, ex-president of Mexico and Margarita's brother), a specialist in sexy comedies who for a change kept her clothes on in this one.

Along with Parodi and Montenegro, Víctor Alcocer, Carlos Cardán and the magician Trébole gave funny performances as Miguelito's partners; and "El Chicote", one of the comics from the golden days of Mexican cinema, made one of his last screen appearances. Do enjoy this comedy, if it ever comes your way.
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8/10
A great little sleazy dark comedy
udar558 February 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Miguel (Alejandro Parodi), a Mickey Spillane reading dirty cop, takes the fall for a senior officer in his corrupt unit after they steals some drugs. Miguel gets six months in jail and is nearly beaten to death by some criminals he put away. He has brain surgery and comes to in a mental hospital where he believes he is a detective from one of the novels he read. Yes, he thinks he is Mike Hammer (they never explicitly say Mike Hammer but he is only shown reading Spillane and tells everyone to "Call me Mike"). He escapes from the mental hospital and begins his search for an imaginary commie named The Red. But what his quest really does is inadvertently pit him against his crooked former partners.

I stumbled across a VHS of this Mexican film on eBay and the cover intrigued me. I mean, wouldn't this intrigue you: Man with gun? Check! Speeding car? Check! Dancer lady? Check! A quick search showed it was out on DVD with English subtitles and, without a hint of the plot, I ordered it for three bucks shipped. So imagine my surprise when it turns out to be a great little film. This is one of those pleasant experiences that I think everyone here can relate to - checking out a movie you know absolutely nothing about and it turns out to be quite enjoyable. The mental ward twist about 30 minutes in took me by complete surprise as I expected this just to be a sleazy cop flick. Lead Parodi is great in the role and director Alfredo Gurrola fills the film with tons of great little dark comedy bits, usually involving someone getting killed. Stunning Sasha Montenegro - looking a little like Barbara Steele - is the go-go dancer love interest. Now I'm not gonna proclaim this as a long, lost classic but it kept me engaged from beginning to end with its witty sense of humor and sleazy storyline.
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10/10
Great Black Humor Mexican Movie!
MarianoDanush6 January 2009
I had lots of fun when i watched this movie, at first i felt i was watching a low budget Mexican movie, the kind you find at sale in bus stops, but then i got really into it and i was laughing my brains out, the acting is good and makes you forget of the bad sound work, i recommend subtitles even if you know Spanish, the originality of the script is supreme it reminds me of Cohen's kind of scripts and of Morirse en Domingo (another black humor Mexican movie). this movie is also a great attack on corruption in the Mexican police, its sad to see that even in those days this existed of course in a smaller scale. A movie worth watching and a guaranteed laugh!
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