Down to the Bone (2002) Poster

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10/10
Claymation at it's best.
MrGlass5 December 2002
Hasta los Huesos (Down to the bone), is claymation at it's best. The directing style of Rene Castillo is unique and different, and that's what makes this short amazing and spectacular. The Cinematography is astounding, Sergio Ulloa does an excellent job, the lighting, the camera angles, the rack focuses, (which is very hard to do in animation) make this short slide to the top with flawless precision.

I loved this short film. It is by far, better than his first short, Sin Sosten (No Support, but Sin Sosten is still also a masterpiece of claymation. From a scale of 1 to 10, Sin Sosten would be a 10, and Hasta los Huesos a 15. I think Rene castillo should get to work, and do an animated feature, and team up again with Sergio Ulloa.
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9/10
Haunting work of animation!
jluis19849 August 2007
Through the history of Mexican cinema, animated films never had a really strong presence until the decade of the 80s, when the relative success of José Luis Moro's "Katy" (a co-production with Spain) renewed the interest in animated films. Granted, there had been many attempts of making animation before, but there was never a real tradition of animated films in the Mexican film industry. Still, the country's many economical troubles stopped the development of animation once again until the 90s when the films by Carlos Carrera ("El Héroe") and the team of René Castillo and Antonio Urrutia ("Sin Sostén") proved that there was still talented animators in Mexico working independently. The 21st century has brought once again a renewed interest in Mexican animation, with many new films done in its first decade. Castillo's second film, "Hasta Los Huesos", it's among the best of this new generation.

"Hasta Los Huesos" begins with the burial of a recently deceased man (Bruno Bichir). In a lonely afternoon, the undertakers carry his coffin while his widow cries hopelessly and a kid who was passing by watches the whole scene. After the coffin has been buried, the man suddenly awakes, however, he is not really alive, as the passage to an underground world opens at the bottom of his coffin. The man falls through the passage and lands in what seems to be a strange stage. As he gets up, he notices that he is now in some kind of bohemian bar where everyone is a skeleton and it seems that the party has just started. Confused, the man walks to the bar, bothered by a worm that keeps biting him and sad as he realizes that he is now dead. As a drink is served to him, a beautiful woman's voice begins to sing, it's the Catrina (Eugenia León), Death herself, who is here to help him understand that to be dead is not so bad.

Known in English as "Down to the Bone" (although it's not an exact translation), "Hasta Los Huesos" was written by director René Castillo himself, who inspired by the Mexican tradition of Day of the Dead, built up a story that thematically could be considered as a loose sequel to his previous film. While "Sin Sostén" was about a man choosing to die, this film deals with the theme of accepting death, as our hero here refuses to accept that death has already taken him away. Like in his previous film, Castillo uses a lighthearted tone of comedy to deal with this dark and melancholic subject, and once again he succeeds in creating a charming bittersweet fable that culminates in a fantastic use of the haunting traditional Mexican song titled "La Llorona" ("The Crying Woman"). Through its 12 minutes of duration, the plot unfolds nicely, and without dialogs (other than the song lyrics), Castillo manages to tell more with images than with words.

"Hasta Los Huesos" follows the same style in both character and set design that Castillo used in his previous film, but this time the result looks a lot more polished, with an even more fluid animation and more complex movements. The cinematography is again in charge of Sergio Ulloa, who once again makes a wonderful job in capturing Castillo's macabre fantasy world with great skill. Clearly inspired by the Day of the Dead festivities, the visual look of "Hasta Los Huesos" has a distinctive Mexican touch that gives the movie a special charm, as Castillo's vision of the underworld resembles the visual style of such celebrations, mainly the zinc etchings by Mexican printmaker José Guadalupe Posada. Despite the macabre themes, "Hasta Los Huesos" is certainly less dark than "Sin Sostén", as Castillo seems to prefer comedy over drama and have a more optimistic view of life this time.

With an astonishing visual look, beautiful music (performed by Mexican rock band "Café Tacuba") and a cleverly written story, "Hasta Los Huesos" is a wonderful animated movie that gives a glimpse of what animation in Mexico could become one day with the appropriate support, and that "New Mexican Cinema" can be more than urban dramas and touch genres such as fantasy and horror. Together with filmmaker Antonio Urrutia, René Castillo proved that clay animation wasn't out of the wave of new Mexican cinema that came out in the 90s. Three years later, Castillo returns and creates a masterpiece that infinitely surpasses what he achieved in his first short. Hopefully, his talents will create a feature length animated movie someday, as if "Hasta Los Huesos" is an indication of the future of Mexican animation, the future looks good. 9/10
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10/10
brilliant slightly macabre claymation
oomen411 October 2003
Hasta los huesos is one of the best shorts i have ever seen, (faintly reminiscent of the earlier wallace & gromit, but then darker and better), the story apart from it being very entertaining, has precisely that macabre and authentic mexican touch (with a very nice musical scene with a twist with the mexican classic song 'la llorona' in it) that makes it a hidden treasure and goes way beyond the stuff pixar, disney and those other big animation studios produce that are socalled 'also fun for adults'.
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10/10
Worm Food versus Eating the Worm
acmelita8 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
"Hasta Los Huesos" you need to "eat the worm" as part of your transition to "worm food".

I can only hope I end up at a place with as good of a tequila selection.

It is a colorful take on what happens to you after death, reminiscent of Day of the Dead style celebrations. The chanteuse's (bone-teuse?) song is married perfectly to the evocative and eerie stopmotion, claymation style animation. You can unearth this treasure at www.Filmporium.com for $5. The DVD also includes the dreamy "Fallen" and the animated adaptation "Crime and Punishment".
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4/10
Lacks in the story department
Horst_In_Translation30 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Hasta los huesos" or "Down to the Bone" is a Mexican 12-minute short film from almost 15 years ago. The writer and director is René Castillo and luckily for all non-Spanish a'speakers, he included no spoken language in here except a song number, but I don't think it's vital to understand the lyrics. On the contrary, this film is basically a collection of impressions. There is no real plot which hurts the film except at the beginning when we see a man buried alive and he descends down to the underworld, where he meets all kinds of strange creatures. We never find out why he was buried alive or why he isn't sent up right away as he is not a skeleton as many of the beings down there. I guess this one is really only worth seeing if you really love the animation style (claymation) as, story-wise, it hasn't a whole lot to offer. People who give this a perfect 10 should ask themselves if this is really one of the greatest films ever made. I am also surprised this little movie won awards all over the planet. I don't see the appeal. Thumbs down.
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10/10
Beautiful
Taburetka139 January 2014
Touching work of art that is bittersweet. Dealing with loss in a mirror reality, confronted with fear, anxiety, anger. At the same time reflecting on how blind we are to death, and suffering until we are face to face. Beautiful feature, very poetic, beautiful music. Unfortunately I do not know translation to the Spanish song in the film. If anyone can post a translation that would be appreciated. Overall this animation is skillfully done, with excellent taste. In 2013 some of the "muerte" art may seem cliché, as it is everywhere right now. But back in 2001 I am sure it looked more fresh. Having experienced a deep personal loss very recently, I was very moved by this film.
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9/10
It looks like a Day of the Dead celebration!
planktonrules1 September 2009
I have always thought that the Mexican Day of the Dead was a fascinating holiday. When I went to Mexico, I brought back a suitcase full of memorabilia from this holiday that coincides (at least partially) with Halloween. The Day of the Dead figures are happy skeletons--wearing clothes and doing many of the things they did while alive. Interestingly enough, HASTA LOS HUESOS ("Down To The Bone") is a Mexican claymation short that looks like the Day of the Dead characters come to life, so to speak.

The short begins with a funeral. Suddenly, the guy inside the coffin wakes up and you think he's been buried alive. However, when the bottom of the coffin opens up and he drops into the afterlife, you know he truly is dead. Almost all the happy singing and dancing beings in this world are skeletal and throughout most of this festive atmosphere, a flesh-eating worm keeps popping up to devour the newest arrival.

All in all, it's a very dark but funny film. On top of that, the animation quality of the stop-motion clay figures is amazingly good. Not quite up to the standards set by Aardman (probably the best in the world when it comes to this) but very, very close as well as entertaining. Fun and well worth seeing--especially if you like your humor a bit on the macabre side.
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