From Prada to Nada
From Prada to Nada | |
---|---|
Directed by | Angel Gracia |
Screenplay by | Luis Alfaro Craig Fernandez Fina Torres |
Produced by | Gary Gilbert Linda McDonough Gigi Pritzker Chris Ranta |
Starring | Camilla Belle Alexa Vega Wilmer Valderrama Nicholas D'Agosto Kuno Becker Adriana Barraza |
Cinematography | Héctor Ortega |
Edited by | Brad McLaughlin |
Music by | Heitor Pereira |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Lions Gate Pantelion Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 107 minutes |
Country | United States |
Languages | English, Spanish |
Box office | $3,836,357[1] |
From Prada to Nada is an American romantic comedy film directed by Angel Gracia and produced by Gary Gilbert, Linda McDonough, Gigi Pritzker and Chris Ranta. The plot was conceived from Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility.[2] The screen play was adapted by Luis Alfaro, Craig Fernandez and Fina Torres to be a Latino version of the English novel, where two spoiled sisters who have been left penniless after their father's sudden death are forced to move in with their estranged aunt in East Los Angeles.[3]
Pantelion Films (joint venture of Lionsgate and Televisa) opened this film in limited theatrical release in the United States on January 28, 2011. In the United States, this film grossed $3 million theatrically;[4] the box office result met Pantelion's expectation.[5][6]
Plot
The film opens with Nora studying law and Mary shopping. They head to their home, Casa Bonita, for their father's birthday. While the girls are dancing with their father, he collapses and dies.
At the funeral they meet Gabe Dominguez, an unknown half brother who resulted from an affair their father had years ago. At the reading of their father's will, they discover that they are bankrupt. Nora and Mary sell their house to Gabe, who lets them live with him and his wife, Olivia. They meet Olivia's brother, Edward, when he visits for lunch. During lunch, Olivia tells the sisters that she is moving them to the basement; refusing to be humiliated in their own home, Nora tells Mary they are moving out. Before they leave, their maid gives Nora a box left by their father.
The two sisters go to East L.A. to live with their maternal aunt, Aurelia, where they are introduced to Bruno, their aunt's neighbor. Nora opens the box and finds letters from her father to Gabe, which his mother returned unopened. Nora quits law school so she can find a job to help support herself and Mary, and tells Mary to finish college. Their aunt sells Mary's car and Prada purse ('from Prada to nada'). Edward arrives and gives Mary and Nora stuff from their old home, offering Nora a job in his law office - which she declines. Nora responds to a job in the classifieds from a paper Edward gave her, and on the bus ride to work she meets a woman who has been fired from her job as a cleaning lady. Nora arrives at her new job and learns that her boss is Edward. They work together on the case for the cleaning ladies, winning a judgment when they discover that there has been a fraud with their payroll.
Mary returns to college, where she meets and flirts with rich instructor Rodrigo. She gets a ride home from him, directing him to a stranger's Beverly Hills mansion rather than her aunt's house in East L.A. They later share a kiss over lunch. After telling her aunt that she won't invite Rodrigo over because she is ashamed to live in East L.A., Mary approaches Bruno outside his house. She makes a deal with him that, if Bruno can make her aunt's backyard look good for a party dedicated to Mexican Independence Day, he can have a dance with Mary. Mary invites Rodrigo to the party and admits to him upon arrival at her aunt's house that this is where she actually lives. After watching how Mary dances with Rodrigo, Bruno declines Mary's offer of a dance to complete the decoration agreement. Edward arrives at the party, and a drunk Nora starts to kiss him, but then becomes afraid of her feelings and that it would destroy her career. Nora coldly informs Edward that she is "just another girl who answered an ad in the paper" to him and drives him away. Outside, she and Bruno share a bottle of wine, sad over having to lose their chances with Mary and Edward.
When Nora receives a promotion and transfer away from Edward, she quits rather than have people believe she slept her way up. When Nora asks Mary if she loves Rodrigo, Mary tells her that she just wants to go back home and that Rodrigo can make that happen, for which Nora calls her a whore and Mary retorts that she would rather be that than a spinster like Nora. Mary and Nora start to ignore each other. Nora opens a free legal aid service from her aunt's home.
Unaware of Nora's feelings for Edward, Gabe insists that Olivia send the Dominguez sisters an invitation to Edward and Olivia's best friend Lucy's engagement party at Casa Bonita. Nora is devastated that Edward is getting married, but Mary urges her to go to the party and be honest with Edward about her feelings. She offers to go with Nora and the sisters reconcile. At the party, Mary and Gabe go to their father's office, where Mary gives Gabe the letters from their father and he tearfully realises that their father wanted to be in his life. Meanwhile, Nora tells Edward she doesn't count on personal relationships due to losing both her parents and that her rejection of Edward wasn't because she didn't love him. Mary sees Rodrigo at the party with another woman who turns out to be his wife and learns that they are buying Casa Bonita. Heartbroken, Mary leaves the party and has a traffic accident after running a red light.
Gabe visits his half-sisters at the hospital and reveals, without sadness, that he and the shrewish Olivia split up. Mary returns home in a wheelchair sporting a neck brace. The next day, when she goes over to Bruno's house, Mary discovers detailed designs for the wheelchair ramp he made for her, sees that he still has the broken car mirror he replaced for her, and other signs that Bruno genuinely cares for her. Mary admits her feelings for him, and they kiss for the first time. Edward arrives with moving truck full of new furniture. He reveals to Nora that he bought the house across from her aunt and presents Nora the front door key, attached to an engagement ring. Family and friends are seen celebrating at Nora and Edward's street party wedding.
Cast
- Camilla Belle as Nora Dominguez – the elder, serious, sister. She is a law student who does not want to put relationships above her career. She starts to fall for Olivia's brother, Edward and marries him at the end of the film. Counterpart to Sense and Sensibility's character Elinor Dashwood.
- Alexa Vega as Mary Dominguez – the younger, frivolous, sister. She loves to shop and misses being rich. She is having sex with wealthy Rodrigo to get back to Beverly Hills, then finds out he is married. She then falls for sensible artist Bruno, her aunt's neighbor. Counterpart to Marianne Dashwood.
- Wilmer Valderrama as Bruno – the next door neighbor of Aunt Aurelia who falls for Mary. Counterpart to Colonel Brandon.
- Nicholas D'Agosto as Edward – the brother of Olivia who falls for Nora and becomes her husband. Counterpart to Edward Ferrars.
- Kuno Becker as Rodrigo Fuentes – the married love interest of Mary. At first they date until Mary finds out he is married. Counterpart to John Willoughby.
- Adriana Barraza as Aureliae Jimenez – the aunt of Nora and Mary. Counterpart to Mrs. Jennings.
- Karla Souza as Lucy
- April Bowlby as Olivia – Gabe's mean, selfish wife and Edward's sister. Counterpart to Fanny Dashwood.
- Alexis Ayala as Gabe Dominguez Sr. – Nora, Mary and Gabe's father. Counterpart to Henry Dashwood.
- Pablo Cruz Guerrero as Gabe Dominguez Jr. – half brother of Nora and Mary and husband of Olivia. Counterpart to John Dashwood.
- Catalina López as Trinita
- Luis Rosales as Juan
Release
From Prada to Nada was released on Blu-ray and DVD May 3, 2011.
Accolades
Award | Category | Recipient(s) | Result |
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12th ALMA Awards | Favorite Movie Actress – Comedy/Musical | Alexa Vega | Won |
References
- ^ "From Prada to Nada (2011)". Box Office Mojo. Amazon.com. Retrieved February 3, 2011.
- ^ "From Prada to Nada - Film Review & Movie Trailer". Latinrapper.com. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
- ^ ""From Prada to Nada," inspires through hardship - Diversions - Daily 49er - California State University Long Beach". Daily 49er. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
- ^ From Prada to Nada, Box Office Mojo
- ^ Movies. "Hispanics at the Movies: Hollywood Misses una Oportunidad | The Wrap Movies". Thewrap.com. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
- ^ "Indie films or big budget movies?". CNN. March 29, 2007.