Parents' Guide to

Flamin' Hot

Movie PG-13 2023 99 minutes
Flamin' Hot movie poster: Richard Montañez gets inspired.

Common Sense Media Review

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

age 13+

Fun, feel-good biopic has language, drugs, mature themes.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 13+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 8+

Based on 7 parent reviews

age 10+

Great positive messages for watchers who aren't triggered by mild adult issues

I loved the positive messages throughout especially how encouraging the wife was towards him & more importantly it spoke the the negative self talk that many of us carry from abuse/dysfunctional parental attachment. I could really relate to the conflict & complexity of the main characters father & him. My 12 year old daughter watched it with me & I didn't have to puase/ff "adult parts" there were thematic inferences but most were light & humorous. As many times as the lead character ran into obstacles, he kept pushing through with the support of his wife & some unlikely allies/coworkers. I wish it would've went into a bit more detail on how they tweaked his wives recipe so that perhaps I could recreate it & see which one I prefer. The only problem I ran into was there were quite a few Spanish/slang parts...my daughter couldn't keep up bc she doesn't understand Spanish & the subtitles were fast & she has dyslexia but that isn't so much the movies fault. I'm Mexican so I could understand & translated some parts for her but she lost interest. My 15 yo son didn't watch but he is fairly fluent in Spanish & would've been able to speed read the subtitles if needed. Overall great movie.. perfect to watch with family (unless you are sensitive to/censoring mild drug themes, gang/criminal themes &/or very mild domestic violence references. I grew up around that environment & found it to be extremely mild in movie. Plus it teaches our kids that they don't have to choose go down those risky paths (join gang, rob, sell narcotics,etc... & to always strive for more especially when you have a family that needs you around.
age 2+

What's the Story?

As a child, Richard Montañez (Jesse Garcia) played in the California orchards where his extended family worked as pickers when FLAMIN' HOT opens. "My playground was everyone else's labor camp," he recalls in a voiceover, as he begins to narrate the story of his rise to the executive suite. Montañez is mistreated by a racist society, joins then leaves a gang, starts a family with his wife Judy (Annie Gonzalez), but still can't land a steady job without his high school diploma. Finally, he's given an opportunity as a janitor at a Frito-Lay factory. Eager to learn, he starts pestering engineer Clarence (Dennis Haysbert) to show him the ropes. Inspired by his own community's heritage and penchant for spicy foods, Richard comes up with the idea of catering some snack products to the Latino market. He dares to make a direct call to the company's CEO, Roger Enrico (Tony Shalhoub). And that's when his real climb begins.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (7 ):
Kids say (3 ):

This empowering biopic is driven by a brisk pace and a charismatic performance from star Garcia. That said, the film's insistence on idealizing its subject could leave some viewers unsatisfied. Flamin' Hot is predictable but entertaining in its rags-to-riches tale featuring a Latino lead with a big heart, big ideas, and little cultural or financial capital. There's some creative visual storytelling, like putting dates on packages and chips on the factory floor to show time passing, or having Garcia amusingly narrate executives' C-suite meetings using street slang as he imagines them bullying one another. Music, editing, and Garcia's spirited performance infuse the film with energy.

Garcia is the heart of this movie. He narrates the tale, splashing his monologues and dialogues with Spanish expressions and terms. He's charismatic in the role, as is the real Montañez, by all accounts. That resourcefulness and relentless charm are part of his legend, although the facts around Montañez's version of his role in Frito-Lay history have been publicly scrutinized. The film opts to gloss over this, with brief scenes mentioning the invention and use of a lab-manufactured spicy powder, and end credits continuing the celebration of the real Montañez's family, life, and career. That glossing over may or may not bother you. It doesn't make the film less entertaining in and of itself, and underestimating viewers' ability to grapple with grey areas hasn't seemed to pose a problem for much of contemporary Hollywood cinema.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about what makes a biopic like Flamin' Hot different from films about fictional characters. How do you know from watching this movie that the story is based on real people?

  • If you research Montañez and Frito-Lay's flamin' hot line, you find this film's account, based on Montañez's autobiography, is disputed. Does that matter to you or change your experience or enjoyment of this movie? Why, or why not? Where could you go for more information?

  • How did Montañez demonstrate perseverance? What obstacles stood in his way?

  • What are some storytelling techniques that stood out to you while watching this film? For example, the use of voiceover, flashbacks, a fast pace and editing, or the music. How would you describe the tone of the movie or your own mood when you finished watching it?

Movie Details

  • On DVD or streaming: June 9, 2023
  • Cast: Jesse Garcia , Dennis Haysbert , Tony Shalhoub
  • Director: Eva Longoria
  • Inclusion Information: Female directors, Latino directors, Latino actors, Black actors, Middle Eastern/North African actors, Female writers, Latino writers
  • Studio: Searchlight Pictures
  • Genre: Drama
  • Topics: History
  • Character Strengths: Perseverance
  • Run time: 99 minutes
  • MPAA rating: PG-13
  • MPAA explanation: some strong language and brief drug material
  • Last updated: September 19, 2024

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