Parents' Guide to

Cassandro

Movie R 2023 106 minutes
Cassandro movie poster: Gael García Bernal stars as the flamboyant wrestler.

Common Sense Media Review

Jennifer Green By Jennifer Green , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 15+

Moody Tex-Mex wrestler biopic has sex, language, violence.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 15+?

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What's the Story?

CASSANDRO is the stage name of Saúl (Gael García Bernal), a lonely gay man who lives with his mother in El Paso. He's a two-bit wrestler on the lucha libre ("free fight," literally) circuit on both sides of the Mexico-U.S. border. When he begins training with a more successful female wrestler, Sabrina (Roberta Colindrez), he transforms his stage persona to a flamboyant (in drag) wrestler (known as "exóticos") called Cassandro. He proves popular with fans and gets backing from local businessman Lorenzo (Joaquín Cosio) and his lackey Felipe (Bad Bunny). Saúl enjoys the spoils of success, but still fights his own demons, including a doomed love affair with a married man (Raúl Castillo), an ailing mother (Perla de la Rosa), and an absentee father (Robert Salas).

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say: Not yet rated
Kids say: Not yet rated

This moody biopic deserves attention, both for its award-worthy central performance by García Bernal and for its sensitive handling of a unique cultural tradition. García Bernal plays Cassandro with a subtlety and sincerity that contrasts poignantly with the theatrics of his "exótico" character in the wrestling ring. His touching devotion to his mother, his impossible love for a married man, his father's rejection, and his disparaged sexuality in a "macho" culture are all scripted, directed, and acted with great delicacy. The film tries to cover perhaps too much time, shrinking Cassandro's successful rise into montages, which short-shrift the uniqueness of his popularity. You walk away with more a feeling than an understanding (for that, a 2018 documentary on the celebrity can fill in the blanks).

Viewers may be drawn to the film because of singer Bad Bunny's small role, but he's on-screen very little. The more memorable secondary characters are played by de la Rosa as his depressed mother and especially Castillo as his repressed lover. But the camera stays almost exclusively on García Bernal, who goes back and forth between a modest son still living with his mother and an increasingly confident and flamboyant stage persona. The intentionally dark lighting and melancholy instrumental theme suggest a darkness perhaps symbolic of the aspects of Saúl's life that must stay hidden or obscured. This works to underscore how different he feels (and is treated) as Cassandro, who swaggers to the ring accompanied by borderland-inspired disco tunes, and works the crowd for laughs with clownish choreography, stage make-up, and costumes -- all of which the production spectacularly re-creates.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about how the film portrays Saúl's transformation into Cassandro.

  • What is meant by "exótico"? Do you think the term is flattering? Why, or why not?

  • The film is set on the U.S.-Mexico border. How was this setting shown in the film?

  • How would you describe the mood of this film? How did this affect your experience as a viewer?

Movie Details

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