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Cocaine Prison

Play trailer Cocaine Prison 2017 Play Trailer Watchlist
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86% Tomatometer 7 Reviews Popcornmeter Fewer than 50 Ratings

Critics Reviews

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Radheyan Simonpillai NOW Toronto The footage the two men take resembles a scrappy journal, like diaries scribbled down on toilet paper. Raw, intimate and sad. Rated: 3/5 Sep 11, 2017 Full Review Jorge Ignacio Castillo The Canadian Crew It personalizes the problem without forgetting the context. Jan 27, 2020 Full Review Christopher Llewellyn Reed Hammer to Nail Cocaine Prison speaks documentary truth to power as sharply as any work of investigative journalism. That's quite the cinematic rush; who needs actual drugs? Jan 24, 2018 Full Review Michael Sicinski Cinema Scope By the end, there is a glimmer of hope that situations like Hernan's will be rectified. But there's no letting up on the failed drug war. Nov 17, 2017 Full Review Tricia Olszewski Washington City Paper The doc feels loosely edited, unfocused, and a bit boring, with unidentified voiceovers to further confuse things. Oct 19, 2017 Full Review Jared Mobarak The Film Stage [We] relate with Hernan and Mario's struggles beyond the faceless notion of crime to understand the people who suffer most are those manipulated by power, wealth, and fear. Rated: B- Sep 13, 2017 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member Cocaine Prison (2017), directed by Violeta Ayala and co-written by Violeta Ayala and Daniel Fallshaw, is a poignant documentary that narrates the story of Hernan Torrez and Mario Bernal, two impoverished Bolivians, who out of need and/or necessity for money, get swept up in the drug trade and pay a steep price. The documentary is sub-titled in English. Ayala weaves together many visual elements to create a compelling documentary where poverty meets imprisonment and misery. Ayala weaves the narrative of Hernan Torrez and Mario Bernal who are serving time in San Sebastian, an overcrowded men's prison in Cochabamba, Bolivia against the efforts of Hernan's family in particular the advocacy of his sister Deisy, and Mario's attempts to seek their freedom which creates the dramatic tension that moves the documentary. The documentary is well-crafted making use of diverse angle shots, editing techniques, first person interviews, third-person interviews, archival footage, voice-over narration, incorporating footage shot by the subject themselves (the filmmaker provided them with little cameras), and incorporates footage shot over several years to create a compelling and powerful film that shines a light on the drug trade in Bolivia, the dysfunction, inequality, and bias of Bolivia's criminal justice system, and the inhumane conditions of the men's prison. The documentary also includes scenes of the filmmaker teaching ESL to prisoners within the prison system. I found the scenes of nature allegorical and alluding to the complexity of the drug trade and all of its implications and ramifications, and as a means to situate the drug trade within the context of the country itself. While Hernan Torrez has been convicted, Mario Bernal is awaiting trial and sentencing yet he is serving time behind bars. And while Hernan Torrez is serving his time, his employer remains free and continues the drug smuggling. Scenes alternate between Hernan Torrez and Mario Bernal's daily life in prison juxtaposed against communal prison scenes with attempts by Deisy, Hernan's sister, to free her brother, and Mario Bernal's pursuing his day in court. It's a balanced documentary for the filmmakers explore involvement in the drug trade from the perspective of a Bolivian family who ekes out a living harvesting cocaine leaves and how their teenage son, Hernan, becomes a drug mule, and how an out-of-work, impoverished Bolivian male with a wife and four children to support takes a job as a piso-coca. The documentary poses many important questions and shines a light on how the person who makes the cocaine, the piso-coca, and/or the person who transports it across the border takes all the risk and bears the brunt of Bolivia's criminal justice system while the masterminds of the drug trade remain free. It also shines a light on how Bolivia's male prison population is made up of impoverished men too poor to afford legal counsel and how many of them are serving time behind bars without trial and sentencing. Cocaine Prison is well-written, edited and directed. and deserving of your attention. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/24/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Cocaine Prison

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Cast & Crew

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Movie Info

Director
Violeta Ayala