Nacho Libre (HD) (2006)

Director: Jared Hess  Starring: Jack Black  
This product qualifies for Free Shipping. Click for details.FREE SHIPPING
*Some restrictions apply. Click here for details.
List Price:  See Details$39.99
Price: $4.99
Shipping: FREE

                Total Price: $4.99

Ships from and sold by iNetVideo
What's this?
Format: HD DVD
Permalink
Marketplace Buying Choices
Buy.com
Price: $26.99
+ FREE shipping
In Stock
datavis
Price: $12.99
+ $3.99 shipping
In Stock
See all 7 New & Used from $2.48 + $2.99 shipping
What's this?
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought.
$4.99
This product qualifies for Free Shipping. Click for details.
Product Summary
Publisher: Paramount
Format: HD DVD
UPC: 00097361197449
Buy.com Sku: 202957278
Item#: V2ESPJ
Buy.com Sales Rank: 4877
Category Keywords: Mexican  Theatrical Release  Wrestlers 
Rating: 
 
He's Nacho Average Hero.
 
 
Features: DVD, Widescreen, English, Dolby Digital (5.1), Dolby, Digital Audio, French
 
Jack Black is more hilarious than ever as Ignacio, a monastery cook who feeds orphan children by day and by night transforms himself into Nacho Libre, a notorious Luchador in stretchy pants. Spurred on by Esqueleto "The Skeleton," a street peasant turned sidekick, Nacho challenges Mexico's most fearsome wrestlers as he fights to save the children and win the affections of Sister Encarnacion, his inspiration and forbidden love. From the creators of Napoleon Dynamite and the writer of School of Rock, Nacho Libre packs "big laughs from start to finish." (Jay Towers, FOX-TV)
 
"...strikes a delicate balance of whimsy and absurdity..."  Joe Leydon, Variety
"Endearingly ridiculous."  Manohla Dargis, The New York Times
"Black's caped "luchador" grows on you. Like a fun guy."  Steven Rea, Philadelphia Inquirer
"If you love Jack Black, you'll love Nacho Libre."  Joel Siegel, Good Morning America
"For such a simple formula comedy, Nacho Libre is one hell of a weird movie. It is also very funny."  Kieran Grant, Eye Weekly

 


Editor's Note

IN THEATERS JUNE 16, 2006

Screenwriter Mike White (SCHOOL OF ROCK) and director Jared Hess (NAPOLEON DYNAMITE) have combined their off-beat talents for this hilarious tale of an orphanage worker (Jack Black) who dreams of becoming a Mexican wrestler.

 

Features
Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound
Interactive Menus
Scene Selection
 
Technical Info

Release Information
Studio: Paramount
Release Date: 11/7/2006
Original Release Date: 2006
Catalog ID: 11974
UPC: 00097361197449
Number of Discs: 1

Audio & Video
Original Language: English
Available Audio Tracks: English
Video: Color

Aspect Ratio
Widescreen  1.85:1

 
Cast & Crew
Ana de la Reguera
Hector Jimenez
Jack Black
Peter Stormare
Billy Weber - Editor
Danny Elfman - Original Music By
Jack Black - Producer
Jared Hess - Director
Jared Hess, et. al. - Writer
Steve Nicolaides - Executive Producer
Xavier Perez Grobet - Cinematographer

 
Awards

MTV Award (2007)
   Jack Black, Hector Jimenez, Nominee, Best Fight

 
Professional Reviews
New York Times
"A sweet bliss-out from the writers Mike White, Jerusha Hess and Jared Hess..." 06/23/2006 p.E21

Total Film
3 stars out of 5 -- "There's sweetness in the slapstick, while the director mines his missionary past to present a Mexico as eccentric and off-beat as the small-town America lovingly mocked in his first film." 08/01/2006 p.35

Sight and Sound
"Director Jared Hess employs an offbeat aesthetic in keeping with his previous offering....Black's infectious, slapstick energy is also a great asset..." 09/01/2006 p.64

Eye Weekly 10 of 10
For such a simple formula comedy, Nacho Libre is one hell of a weird movie. It is also very funny...Napoleon Dynamite creator Jared Hess' collaboration with Jack Black and co-writer/producer Mike White is the sum of its parts, copping the look and feel of a Santo-style '60s Mexican wrestling picture, injecting it with Hess' singular touch (arch dialogue, exaggerated accents, deadpan stares, fleeting surrealism) and letting loose Black -- a master of controlled chaos -- for the physical flourishes and mock gravitas. Where this takes them, and us, exists nowhere else outside of Nacho Libre's universe. - Kieran Grant
 
San Francisco Chronicle 8 of 10
If a dissertation is ever written about Jack Black, a whole chapter should be devoted to "Nacho Libre," not because it's particularly good, but because it's odd. The movie has the realistic locations, the small-world specificity and the plot details of a poignant drama. At times, it even seems to be trying to go for a dramatic effect. Yet everything in the direction is consistently broad, rendering absurd all that the movie simultaneously tries to build...Curiously, these wrestling scenes are not especially funny, just lighthearted, and that only occasionally. The world of wrestling is taken seriously, as is the world of the monastery. - Mick LaSalle
 
ReelViews 6 of 10
When a movie tries to be intentionally campy, it follows a difficult road. Most films that attempt this fail because the artifice of the situation drains the humor from it. Genuine camp is the child of earnestness and ineptitude, and is only found in features that the director intends to be taken seriously. That's not to say it can't be manufactured as a means of parody, but such an act requires a deftness of touch that, at least in this case, escapes director Jared Hess. After a promising beginning, Nacho Libre goes off the rails with its over-the-top satire and intentional campiness failing to generate many laughs. The film starts out funny, but it doesn't take long for it to become tedious...It's possible to see some similarities between Nacho Libre and Hess' Napoleon Dynamite. Both films are about outsiders, and both main characters have bizarre best friends. However, the main character in Napoleon Dynamite was an unpleasant individual. In Nacho Libre, he's a lovable loser...If you're a fan of Jack Black's overacting antics, you may find what Nacho Libre has to offer to be palatable. For me, the film dragged. It's only 90 minutes long, but it seemed longer. I laughed a few times, usually at physical gags (such as what happens when Nacho makes the mistake of challenging a bull), but too little of the film's humor worked its magic. Neither the romance nor the friendship between Nacho and Esqueleto has an effective emotional payoff, and attempts to humanize the Nacho caricature make parts of the film feel awkward. Too much in Nacho Libre doesn't work to enable me to recommend it to anyone except a card-carrying member of the Jack Black fan club. - James Berardinelli
 
Chicago Sun-Times 5 of 10
Jack Black is not very funny in "Nacho Libre," and that requires some meditation. Jack Black is essentially, intrinsically and instinctively a funny actor. He has that Christopher Walken thing going where you smile when he appears in a movie. It takes some doing to make a Jack Black comedy that doesn't work. But "Nacho Libre" does it...The problem with "Nacho Libre" is not its content but its style. It is curiously disjointed. Episodes meander on and off the screen without much conviction. While in training, Brother Ignacio climbs a rocky cliff to eat the yolk of an eagle's egg, and what's the payoff? He eats it and dives back into the water. Jokes do not build to climaxes, confrontations are misplaced, the professional wrestling itself is not especially well-staged and Black's tag-team partner, Esquelto (Hector Jimenez) is not well-defined...I suppose there will be those who find "Nacho Libre" offensive in one way or another, but with comedy a little political incorrectness comes with the territory. Yes, Mexico in the movie seems to be a country where English is the language and Spanish is a hobby. Yes, Brother Ignacio is mugged by a Wild Child for a bag of nacho chips. And yes, Brother Ignacio's cooking is so bad that this may be the first orphanage in the history of fiction where an urchin approaches the cook and asks, "Please, sir, may I have less food?"...I dunno. I sat there and watched scenes flex their muscles and run off in the direction of comedy and trip over something. I saw the great Jack Black occasionally at wit's end. I saw wrestling matches that were neither painful nor funny and not well-enough choreographed to make much sense. "Nacho Libre" begins with a certain air of dejection, as if it already suspects what we're about to find out. - Roger Ebert
 

  
Product Images
You Might Also Like...
Add This Item: Nacho Libre (HD)
Nacho Libre (HD) HD DVD : Jack Black : Jared Hess $5.99
Add to cart
This product is eligible for Free Shipping. Click for details.
Nacho Libre (HD) HD DVD : Jack Black : Jared Hess $8.99
Add to cart
This product is eligible for Free Shipping. Click for details.
Rushmore  DVD
Nacho Libre (HD) HD DVD : Jack Black : Jared Hess $9.98
Add to cart
This product is eligible for Free Shipping. Click for details.
Nacho Libre (HD) HD DVD : Jack Black : Jared Hess $8.99
Add to cart
This product is eligible for Free Shipping. Click for details.


Look For Similar Products By Category
Copyright 2009 Muze ®. For personal non-commercial use only. All rights reserved.
Suggestion Box
Every voice counts, so stand up and be heard! Your opinion is important to us. If you have spotted a typo, discovered an incorrect price, or encountered a technical issue on this page, we want to hear about it. Thanks again for your feedback, and happy shopping! Please note: we are unable to reply directly to suggestions.
For additional information, click here to visit our Help Center.
Quick Help My Account What are you looking for? Country