The Zero Hour (2010 film)

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Directed byDiego Velasco
Written byDiego Velasco
Carolina Paiz
Produced byRodolfo Cova
Carolina Paiz
StarringZapata 666
Amanda Key
The Zero Hour
Directed byDiego Velasco
Written byDiego Velasco
Carolina Paiz
Produced byRodolfo Cova
Carolina Paiz
StarringZapata 666
Amanda Key
CinematographyLuis Otero Prada
Edited byOtto Scheuren
Music byFreddy Sheinfeld
Gabriel Velasco
Release date
  • 8 October 2010 (2010-10-08)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryVenezuela
LanguageSpanish

The Zero Hour (Spanish: La hora cero) is a 2010 Venezuelan action film directed by Diego Velasco that takes place during a medical strike in Venezuela.

In Caracas in 1996, a medical strike takes place. Parca (Zapata 666), a self-described Grim reaper[1] and regular sicario,[2] brings a pregnant injured woman (Amanda Key) to his gang; the locals are unsympathetic to the doctors' reasons for strike and kidnap a doctor (Erich Wildpret) from the picket line, but the child is born in the back of a car. Witnessing this, Parca becomes invested in helping the needy, holding-up a private hospital and taking hostages to release in return for treatment of those from the slums.[1] Eventually, this violent scheme collapses on him and the people around him.[3]

Production

The production mimicked the story of the film, facing troubles involving the kidnap of three crew members,[1] including its co-producer,[2] director Velasco being held-up at gunpoint, and the assassination of an actor shortly before recording his parts.[1][2] Despite the themes, a co-writer said that they "want viewers to digest and interpret the movie’s ideas, not to put ideas in their heads".[2]

By 2016, it was the highest-grossing Venezuelan national film,[4] getting $3.5 million in box office takings in Venezuela.[5]

Reception

The film was well-received in the Americas, both North and South.[5] It was given as an example in the book The Precarious in the Cinemas of the Americas of a "socially-engaged thriller [...] that [makes] use of mainstream cinema techniques, such as MTV-style, fast-paced editing and the inclusion of violent scenes to call attention to the collective responsibility for social inequalities".[6]

Cast

Awards

References

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