Bandidas
|
| List Price: | $14.98 |
| Price: | $9.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
84 new or used available from $3.85
Average customer review:Product Description
Salma Hayek and Penelope Cruz have never been sexier as they team up for this hilarious, action-packed western! Determined to avenge the deaths of their fathers, Sara Sandoval (Hayek) and Maria Alvarez (Cruz) vow to seize the ill-gotten gains of robber baron Tyler Jackson (Dwight Yoakam). So, with help from a retired bank robber (Sam Shepard) and a jittery criminologist (Steve Zahn), these two beauties become unlikely outlaws, blazing a trail of larceny and laughter across Mexico!
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #3842 in DVD
- Released on: 2007-01-09
- Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Formats: AC-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
- Original language: English, Spanish
- Subtitled in: English, Spanish
- Dubbed in: English, Spanish
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 92 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
First screened in Europe and scheduled for limited release in the U.S., Bandidas can now be viewed by all fans of the visually stunning duo, Penelope Cruz and Salma Hayek. Set in Mexico 1888, Bandidas
is a Western spoof about two women, Maria Alvarez (Penelope Cruz) and Sara Sandoval (Salma Hayek), who seek to avenge the tragedies befallen both their fathers under robber baron, Tyler Jackson (Dwight Yoakam). Jackson, employed by the Bank of New York, is sent to Mexico to buy land and open banks to the detriment of local culture. Jackson kills Sara's corrupt father, Don Diego, while bandits burn down Maria's home. The two ladies band together for the community's cause. Under the tutelage of Bill Buck (Sam Sheperd), Sara and Maria develop bank robbery skills. When criminologist, Quentin Cooke (Steve Zahn), hunts them, they convert him with their strong moral sense and good looks. Like any Thelma and Louise-ish tale of women who take charge, Maria and Sara are foil characters who eventually become an invincible, sisterly team. This comedy is built around their bickering. For Sara, with European education and penchant of designer clothing, Maria is a hick who lacks refinement, yet Maria, horse whisperer, can fire a gun. The slapstick is overkill, for example when Sara wonders whether a bandana is Gucci or Prada. However, viewers will love Penelope Cruz on horseback and the two actresses practice-kissing their foe in a brothel. Bandidas is a light film with some laughs and mucho sex appeal. -- Trinie Dalton
Beyond Bandidas
| More Films from Salma Hayek | More Films from Penelope Cruz | More Comic Westerns |
![]() | ![]()
| ![]() |
![]() | | ![]() |
Customer Reviews
Based on the Kurt Vonnegut/Paddy Chayefsky short story!
Will the two stars get it on, make-out, or at least have a pillow fight? That's the question you the viewer will spend the movie asking, waiting in breathless anticipation for an answer. Well I'm not gonna give it to you. You'll have to watch it to find out. I wouldn't want to spoil the delicious anticipation you'll feel especially since it will keep you tuned in when things get slow. I will say that the girls have a scene where, dressed as French show girls, Salma teaches Penelope how to kiss a man so that he'll never forget her. Also Penelope as a crack pistol shot is hot, and Salma as an expert with knives in even hotter. There's some kind of plot and cowboys and such although really this could have taken place in medieval Europe, feudal Japan or Jupiter's third moon (Ganymede smart guy!) and still have kept most of it's appeal. It was made mostly to get the two lovely stars together. And what a constellation they make! (Sorry!) Salma throws some decent bad girl attitude and Penelope is just as fetching as the sweetie-pie trying to act like a Toughie. Steve Zahn does his thing, this time as an Old-West CSI-type Pinkertonesque detective, which is always welcome. There's also a bit of an anti-corporate, pro-little guy message, and some corny humor, which makes for good viewing when mixed with the stars' natural charm and beauty. A good time. I actually look forward to a sequel.
A Latina -exploitation film
Two pretty girls join the revolution when the rich girl's father is poisoned and the poor girl's father is shot. A bad Texas fellow represents
the American villain who is killing and foreclosing on anybodies' place on the railroad right of way.
A criminologist from New York who is engaged to the bank owner's daughter
comes to their aid as does a priest and an ex-bank robber.
A team forms up in the Robin Hood tradition of taking from the rich and giving back to the poor.
For my money as good as the two female actresses are, this movie
was made for only gain and has nothing do do with the history
of the late 1800's in Mexico. By the start of the 1900's
Mexico which is actually as rich in resources as the United States
was being subject to foreign exploitation that ended in a long period
of revolutionary struggle. The "Animal Farm' effect is no where so
obvious as in Mexico, where to poor are kept uneducated
and their land always finding the way to richer hands.
So that two Latina actresses should be part of mocking
that history is a very sad case.
Thelma and Luisa
It's cliché-filled, but who cares? Did you see the box cover?! Every western has a few of the same scenes dressed up in a different manner depending on the cast. Afterall, villians don't wear white, and there has never been a Hayak/Cruz in skimpy-clothing-and-Wonderbra movie of which I'm aware.
I'm not ashamed to admit that I was looking for some nudity going into this movie, and was disappointed in the fact that neither of the leading ladies lost any lingerie. I thought that the cat-fight scene alone would be good for at least some gratuitous frontal nudity. Considering the sexy box-cover, I feel that my disappointment is justified. Afterall, it's clearly what they were attempting to use to sell the movie.
Maria (Penelope Cruz) and Sara (Salma Hayek) become improbable bank robbers - with tutelage from an old crook named Buck (Sam Shepard) - when brought together by tragedy. One rich, Sara, and one poor, Maria, are polar opposites. Initially they are naturally outwardly opposite of one another, and therefore enemies. That all changes when each girl suffers through either a fatal or near-fatal family experience - a direct result of an evil railroad construction project planned to go straight through each girl's property; from there on out, they each have the same mission of revenge.
The rest of the movie is just a showcase for Hayak and Cruz, a reason to show them both off in attractive clothing and beautiful Mexican scenery, as they fight the apparently evil Tyler Jackson (Dwight Yoakum) and his bank/railroad enterprise. But, really, it's just a reason to watch Hayak and Cruz get in a cat fight while wearing revealing clothing. It's not a deep film, not an overly interesting plot, and it's not remotely close to winning any awards. It's just an entertaining, perfect date movie - there's women empowerment for the ladies, and copious cleavage for the guys.






