Culture | A Mexican wave

Made in Mexico: why the new Hollywood is south of the border

Streamers and audiences can’t get enough Mexican drama

This illustration shows a film strip in the colors of the Mexican flag (green, white, and red), flowing like a flag, symbolizing Mexican cinema
Illustration: Allie Sullberg
|MEXICO CITY

Churubusco Studios, a rambling complex in Mexico City, has been in business since 1945; in that time it has overseen some 3,000 movies and more telenovelas than anyone can remember. Today, on one of its sound stages, sits something from the future: a curving, luminous wall of 800 LED panels, stretched out in a panorama the size of four double-decker buses. The giant screen, displaying a computer-generated backdrop of Mexico City, is manipulated by technicians who can change the weather or rearrange buildings from a nearby console covered with glittering monitors and switches. It is “like flying the Apollo 11”, says Monica Reina, the head of Simplemente, the company that built it.

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This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “A Mexican wave”

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