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Movie Rating: 6 / 10

In this rather funny movie, Jack Black plays Ignacio, a grown-up cook in a Mexican monastery and yes, he cooks some sort of nacho “thing” that the orphans have to eat, in order not to starve to death.
So Ignacio is cook alright but he dreams of becoming a lucha libre wrestler, at first to get the attention but eventually, it’s to help feed the orphans something more apetizing than the nacho-gumbo he’s been forced to feed them, mainly because the orphanage is somewhat poorish.
The guys who made this movie also made “Napoleon Dynamite” and “The School of Rock” so in Nacho Libre, there’s so much silliness that at some point (early in the movie), you just go “okay, this is just going to become sillier as the movie progresses”… and it does!
There’s a strong moral fiber to the movie because inside, Ignacio cares very much for the orphans who kind of consider him to be a father figure they never had.
Helping the orphans eat better food (easy to accomplish considering the “stuff” they were previously eating) also helps impress Sister Encarnacion who eventually comes to see Ignacio as a savior for the children and not just a savage who fights in a right with other lucha libre wrestlers.
This already offbeat comedy takes an even funnier turn when Nacho Libre (Ignacio’s wrestling name) takes Esqueleto for a wrestling partner. As the name implies, Esqueleto looks like squeleton which is hardly the type of partner you’d be looking for if you wanted to fight seasoned wrestlers in Mexico. But as it turns out, the two make a good team, in and out of the ring.
The movie opens up so many avenues for comedy that at some point, you may feel there are way too many open ends to jokes that could’ve been wrapped up in a more convincing way. For instance, when Esqueleto becomes the wet dream of woman who happens to be the daughter of the wrestling league, the laughs could go on forever but that side of the story was only minimally explored. Oh, well! Choices had to be made, I guess.
Once you’ve seen the movie, there’s little reason to see it again, unless you’re a Jack Black fanatic and you want to observe his every mimic on slow motion. Renting the movie may be nice perhaps waiting for it to air on the movie channel would be a wiser choice.
It’s funny but in the end, there’s a little something missing.
It’s silly, cheesy, laughable and there are some unpredictable twists -but- somehow, the end of the movie comes at a moment when lots of stuff is going on… maybe that’s because a “Nacho Libre 2″ is in the works, who know?
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Tags: nacho libre, wrestling, comedy, movie, jack black, mexican, monastery
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