Secuestro Express Review

Secuestro Express
This film chronicles a new vogue in the Latin-American under-society, the 'quick kidnapping'. A young rich couple are abducted by three thugs and held ransom for cash from their wealthy parents.

by Anna Smith |
Published on
Release Date:

09 Jun 2006

Running Time:

90 minutes

Certificate:

TBC

Original Title:

Secuestro Express

Ostensibly a thriller, this Venezuelan kidnap film borders on horror, dwelling on a young couple’s ordeal in terrifying detail. Inspired by the many real-life kidnappings in Caracas, it shows Carla (Mía Maestro) and Martin (Jean Paul Leroux) nabbed after a night on the tiles and taken on a harrowing journey while their heavy-handed captors await a ransom.

It’s an educational insight into the devastating consequences of the country’s social unrest and a pacy, gripping watch. Aside from the odd dash of black humour, however, this is hard to class as entertainment: its obsession with gangster culture verges on the morbid, and the characterisation is elbowed out of the way by the action. Nonetheless, as a vivid depiction of a kidnapping, it does the job.

Illuminating as to the reality of being a victim of crime in a dangerous society but not exactly absorbing entertainment.
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