'Under the Same Moon' a fairy-tale take on illegal immigration

A fairy tale made more for grown-ups than for children, "Under the Same Moon" is as shamelessly sentimental as a mariachi band's love song.The plot focuses on a little boy in Mexico who sets out to join his mother in Los Angeles, where she is working illegally in hopes of providing a better life for her son than he would have otherwise. Who could root against a plucky little boy braving such a trip alone? Who could fault a parent for cherishing such an American dream?Well, probably the people who draw a hard line on the issue of illegal immigration. "Under the Same Moon" may hope to melt their hearts, but it's more likely to affect only those already sympathetic to its mission. Or those who are suckers for a cute kid who wants nothing more than to be with his mother.Carlitos (Adrian Alonso) has been living with his grandmother, Benita (Angelina Pelaez), in their small Mexican village since his mother, Rosario (Kate del Castillo), crossed the border into the United States four years ago. Working illegally as a domestic, Rosario sends money home every month but also tries to save so that one day she can bring Carlitos to her.Every Sunday, Rosario goes to a pay phone in East Los Angeles to call Carlitos on a pay phone in the village. She describes her location to him and does all she can to make him feel close to her, but Carlitos, now 9, believes he'd be better off with his mother at home, never mind their poverty.An enterprising lad, Carlitos has money of his own, and when his grandmother's death threatens to put him in the custody of relatives of his AWOL father, he arranges to cross into Texas with some nervous novice "coyotes," a Mexican-American sister and brother (America Ferrera, Jesse Garcia).Texas is a long way from L.A., and Carlitos has just a few days to get to his mom before she finds out he's missing and heads to Mexico to look for him.Carlitos' experiences range from fun to heartbreaking and improbable to frightening. Viewers who like to take to the soapbox over child endangerment will not approve. But again, this is a fairy tale -- lighted by a magical moon and laced with love and positivity.Mexican director Patricia Riggen, working from a script by Ligiah Villalobos, cuts back and forth between Rosario and Carlitos, and their dual tales fuel the connection and emphasize the sacrifice that each has made."Under the Same Moon" is predictable, and in some cases farfetched, but the performers are irresistible, not just del Castillo and Alonso but also Eugenio Derbez as Enrique, Gabriel Porras as Paco and Maya Zapata as Alicia. They play people, not types.While U.S. authorities are painted as bad guys, there are worse villains, Mexicans as well as Americans, in the story -- people trying to use and abuse others, men shirking their parental responsibilities. "Under the Same Moon" chides them even as it puts a human face on the illegal side of illegal immigration.Rated PG-13 for some mature thematic elements.4 stars (out of five)(Contact Knoxville News Sentinel film critic Betsy Pickle at pickle(at)knews.com.)(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, http://www.scrippsnews.com)

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Illegal Immigration Fairy Tale

Do the fairy tale authors in their effort to gain sympathy for criminal acts (8 U.S.C. 1325 criminalizes illegal entry of the US) balance their presentation by including the harms coming from illegal immigration: closing border hospitals, massive increases in welfare, health and local education costs, reintroduction of previously eradicated diseases, invasion of homes of border residents, trashing of national parks and the above average crime rate of illegal aliens, just to name a few?

You correct. This is more

You correct.

This is more Hollywood quick sell to liberal hearts.

These are criminals and we need our State and Federal governments cracking down on the Business and enforce our already existing LAWS!

Send them home with this video, so they have something to watch on the flight home.

Under The Same Jail

This is nothing more than pandering to the pro illegal alien crowd. We have had enough! I'd like to see a movie about the hospitals forced to close and the overcrowded schools that don't teach kids anything but how to flash gang signs. "Under the Same Jail" would be an appropriate title. There have been over 48,000 Americans murdered and killed by illegal aliens since 9/11/2001. It's time to adopt a ZERO tolerance for breaking our immigration laws. I can't wait until the annual May 1st protest marches. It's time to bring in the national guard and round them up. Legals to the left....illegals to the right. The buses are waiting!

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