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Transpecos (film)

Transpecos is a 2016 American thriller film directed by Greg Kwedar, and written by Kwedar and Clint Bentley. The film stars Johnny Simmons, Gabriel Luna, and Clifton Collins Jr. as border patrol agents who encounter a Mexican drug cartel. The film premiered at South by Southwest on March 13, 2016.[1] The film was released on September 9, 2016, in a limited release and through video on demand by Samuel Goldwyn Films.[2]

Transpecos

Greg Kwedar

  • Greg Kwedar
  • Clint Bentley

  • Molly Benson
  • Greg Kwedar
  • Clint Bentley
  • Nancy Schafer

Alan Canant

  • 8750 Films
  • Marfa Peach Company

  • March 13, 2016 (2016-03-13) (SXSW)
  • September 9, 2016 (2016-09-09) (United States)

86 minutes

United States

  • English
  • Spanish

Plot[edit]

Three agents (Benjamin Davis, Lance Flores, and Lou Hobbs) find some drug evidence in a car at a desert checkpoint, which reveals an insidious plot in their organisation. They set out to uncover the truth by putting their life on the line.

as Benjamin Davis

Johnny Simmons

as Lance Flores

Gabriel Luna

as Lou Hobbs

Clifton Collins Jr.

as Agent Hendricks

Will Brittain

as Marisa

Alma Martinez

as Dispatch 700

David Acord

as Mexican Leader

Oscar Avila

as Man in Car

Alex Knight

as Agent Jaeger

Jake Lockett

as Agent Lupo

Lora Martinez-Cunningham

as Young Agent

Robert Douglas Washington

as Family Man

Sam Adler

as Chief Carter

Ralph Alderman

as Agent Mike Billings

Clint Bentley

as Caroline

Caroline Derpienski

Cesar Lopez as Boy in Road

as Jiminez

Jesus Mayorga

Release[edit]

Transpecos received its world premiere at South by Southwest in Austin, Texas on March 13, 2016.[3][4] Shortly after, Samuel Goldwyn Films acquired U.S distribution rights to the film, with a planned fall release.[5]

Reception[edit]

The film was met with positive reviews from critics. John DeFore of The Hollywood Reporter wrote: "Artfully made but wholly accessible for a mainstream audience, it features strong performances but no names in the cast who'll draw attention on their own." DeFore went on to single out the performance of Gabriel Luna, writing: "While all three performances are on target, the film belongs to Luna, as Flores scrambles to mislead the bosses he wants to alert until he and Davis can somehow fix this botched smuggling run."[6] Kahron Spearman of The Austin Chronicle wrote: "With nail-biting precision, Kwedar has crafted Transpecos into a diamond."[7]

Official website

at IMDb

Transpecos

at Rotten Tomatoes

Transpecos