http://trailers.apple.com/trailers/independent/elsicarioroom164/
SYNOPSIS
el sicario The term sicario goes back to Roman Palestine, where a Jewish sect, the Sicarii, used concealed daggers (sicae) in their murders of Romans and their supporters. In modern language, a sicario is a professional killer or a hit man.
In an anonymous motel room on the U.S./Mexico border, a Ciudad Juárez hit man speaks. He has killed hundreds of people and is an expert in torture and kidnapping. He was simultaneously on the payroll of the Mexican drug cartels and a commander of the Chihuahua State Police. There is currently a $250,000 contract on his life and he lives as a fugitive, though he has never been charged with a crime in any country. With his face obscured by a black mesh hood, tells his story to the camera inside the very hotel room he once used to hold and torture kidnapped victims. Aided only by a magic marker and notepad, which he uses to illustrate and diagram his words, the sicario describes, in astounding detail, his life of crime, murder, abduction and torture.
El Sicario, Room 164, directed by Italian documentarian Gianfranco Rosi (Below Sea Level), is a cinematic companion piece to the writing of American journalist Charles Bowden, winner of the 1996 Lannan Literary Award for Nonfiction and author of books including Murder City: Ciudad Juarez and the Global Economy's New Killing Fields (2010) and the newly published El Sicario: The Autobiography of a Mexican Assassin (2011).
"A minimalist study in maximum violence, Gianfranco Rosi's El Sicario Room 164 offers viewers
the rare chance to meet a Mexican narco hitman and to live to tell the tale." --Variety
el sicario The term sicario goes back to Roman Palestine, where a Jewish sect, the Sicarii, used concealed daggers (sicae) in their murders of Romans and their supporters. In modern language, a sicario is a professional killer or a hit man.
In an anonymous motel room on the U.S./Mexico border, a Ciudad Juárez hit man speaks. He has killed hundreds of people and is an expert in torture and kidnapping. He was simultaneously on the payroll of the Mexican drug cartels and a commander of the Chihuahua State Police. There is currently a $250,000 contract on his life and he lives as a fugitive, though he has never been charged with a crime in any country. With his face obscured by a black mesh hood, tells his story to the camera inside the very hotel room he once used to hold and torture kidnapped victims. Aided only by a magic marker and notepad, which he uses to illustrate and diagram his words, the sicario describes, in astounding detail, his life of crime, murder, abduction and torture.
El Sicario, Room 164, directed by Italian documentarian Gianfranco Rosi (Below Sea Level), is a cinematic companion piece to the writing of American journalist Charles Bowden, winner of the 1996 Lannan Literary Award for Nonfiction and author of books including Murder City: Ciudad Juarez and the Global Economy's New Killing Fields (2010) and the newly published El Sicario: The Autobiography of a Mexican Assassin (2011).
"A minimalist study in maximum violence, Gianfranco Rosi's El Sicario Room 164 offers viewers
the rare chance to meet a Mexican narco hitman and to live to tell the tale." --Variety