Tijuana Makes Me Happy

Tijuana Makes Me Happy

Release date : January 1, 2007
Runtime : 1h 19m
Countries of origin : Mexico /
Original Language : Spanish /
Director : Dylan Verrechia /
Production companies : 25th Frame / Verrechia Films / Palenque Filmaciones /
January 1, 2007 1h 19m Mexico Drama Spanish More
5.6
User Score

Overview

Every man remembers how hard it is being 15 years old: Your voice is cracking, your hormones are raging, school is boring, the girl you love is a young prostitute who won't go out with you because you don't have enough cash, so you start smuggling drugs across the border in order to save enough money to buy a rooster so you can enter a cockfight and win her love. It's a tale as old as time itself. Tijuana Makes Me Happy, which won the Grand Jury Prize at this year's Slamdance Film Festival, is both a charming coming-of-age story and a celebration of the most infamous of all Mexican border towns.
More »

Top Billed Cast

More

Videos

View All Videos

Images

View All Images

Recommendations

More
The Hireling
Drama Romance
Ruby Fruit
Romance Fantasy
Deadlock
Horror Comedy
Tsuburo no Gara
Science Fiction Mystery
CVTV
Action Comedy Crime Science Fiction
  • title:Tijuana Makes Me Happy
  • status:Released
  • Release date: 2007
  • Runtime:1h 19m
  • Genres: Drama · Comedy · Romance ·
  • Countries of origin: Mexico ·
  • Original Language: Spanish ·
  • Director: Dylan Verrechia /
  • Writers: Aidée González · James Lefkowitz · Dylan Verrechia · Pablo Tendilla Rocha ·
  • Production companies: 25th Frame · Verrechia Films · Palenque Filmaciones ·
  • Overview:Every man remembers how hard it is being 15 years old: Your voice is cracking, your hormones are raging, school is boring, the girl you love is a young prostitute who won't go out with you because you don't have enough cash, so you start smuggling drugs across the border in order to save enough money to buy a rooster so you can enter a cockfight and win her love. It's a tale as old as time itself. Tijuana Makes Me Happy, which won the Grand Jury Prize at this year's Slamdance Film Festival, is both a charming coming-of-age story and a celebration of the most infamous of all Mexican border towns.
Search history
delete
Popular search