Last Friday my family and I went to see Despicable Me 2 on
its opening weekend. We were not alone and the theater was pretty full on a
late Friday afternoon. Impressively, the film earned $82.5 million that weekend, more than any other film currently out. Having a 4-year-old and a
6-year-old has allowed me to enjoy animated films again without guilt. Savvy
film producers of kids’ films have always included inside jokes for adults,
making the films even more enjoyable. It’s too bad, though, that those filmmakers
are still not savvy about Latinos and how to tap into that rapidly growing
market. Rather than offering a pleasant escape as Monsters University had done
for me the week before (and being a college professor I really loved that
film’s attention to the details of university life), I came away feeling
annoyed.
*******SPOILER ALERT*******
A few people have already written about the
representation of Latinos in this film (here, here, and here). To
summarize briefly, the main character, Gru, is enlisted to find a super-villain
with plans to take over the world with a serum that makes individuals
indestructible. Gru goes undercover as a mall shop-owner, as the agency that employs him has
intelligence that the villain is operating from there. There are a number of
suspects, but Gru singles out a Mexican restaurant owner, Eduardo, who is
Mexican himself. Eduardo fulfills many stereotypes with an overwrought Spanish
accent (voiced by Peruvian-American Benjamin Bratt; a second choice when Al
Pacino pulled out after already voicing the character), a tattoo of the Mexican
flag on his chest (which did illicit a giggle from me when he revealed it), and
a pet rooster that guards his business. These tropes alone are not the worst of
it.
Gru remembers from his own days as a villain that Eduardo
resembles El Macho, whose claim to fame was riding sharks and wearing a lucha
libre mask as he wreaked havoc. While in stealth pursuit of Eduardo, Gru’s
adopted tween daughter Margo develops a crush on Eduardo’s son Antonio who
hangs out at the mall. Strangely, he has an accent thicker than his father’s
that only vaguely sounds Spanish, and he seems to have a precocious sexuality as
he woos Margo. Gru and his daughters end up attending an after-hours party
where they dance salsa, don a chip sombrero holding guacamole, and find out
that Eduardo is in fact El Macho and that his son is a lout as he dumps Margo
for another girl.
Taken together, this seems like a laundry list of
stereotypes that were poorly thought out, creating thin characters. Granted
that this is a kids film, but the filmmakers already made the quick turn toward
making the Latino characters the bad guys. The least they could have done was
make them interesting and non-offensive bad guys (in terms of cultural
stereotypes).
I was already primed for this negative reaction as there
were three more animated films in the previews that all had Latino characters
and all relied on similar simplistic representations, which could easily be
seen in the few minute clips from each. “Planes,” the companion trilogy to “Cars,”
which has its first installment this summer, has a plane named Chupacabra, who
much like Antonio in Despicable Me 2, delivers his laughs because of his
hyper-sexual Latin lover character. In “Turbo,” a snail who
develops the ability to race at Indy car speeds, gets connected with a
Latino boy, whose father owns a taco truck (sigh). Finally, "Cloudy With a Chance of
Meatballs 2," revives its Latino character, Manny, a short, mustachioed, sidekick,
who serves only as comic relief (and is also voiced by Benjamin Bratt-sell out
much?), and whose big line in the sequel is to notice an (evil) taco supreme
that attempts to eat the main characters.
The opinion research firm Latino Decisions recently found
that across many categories and types of media, a majority of those polled
believes that Latinos are portrayed negatively in the media. They found that 71% of people see Latinos portrayed as criminals sometimes or very often in media and film. So, it is not so surprising that Despicable Me 2 would resort
to that stereotype. In my opinion, it would be better to not be portrayed at
all than to be portrayed with tired, negative characterizations.
As a small post-script, I still have hope for Latino
portrayals in the media. I have not seen this show on Hulu yet, but NPR gave a
very positive review for “East Los High.” It follows the drama of teen life in
the overwhelming Latino East Los Angeles. NPR gave it really high marks not
only on its quality, but also on its cultural sensitivity. One of the
co-creators, Carlos Portugal stated he had some pretty simple guidelines for
his writers: “no gardeners, no gang members and no maids.” He continued,
"my hope is that people from East L.A. get to see themselves in the show
portrayed as diverse human beings and not the typical Latino stereotypes we see
in TV and films." Thank goodness. I
look forward to watching and will be writing about it soon.
Agree. I was annoyed during most of Despicable Me 2 because of the El Nacho character. Disappointed I paid to see it. I used to LOVE Benjamin Bratt, too.
ReplyDeleteAnother aspect of despicable me 2 that annoyed me was the cultural ignorance when developing the character. He is dressed like scarface (stereotypically cuban in Hollywood) and owns a restaurant in which he plays and dances salsa (Caribbean music) while playing pitbull every chance they get throughout the movie. It appears that they clump up every Spanish speaking culture in the country and brand it Mexican. A very disingenuous portrayal of our different Hispanic cultures.
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