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Does not become, as the trailer calls it, “the biggest oecumenical motion picture of all time,” the most inspiring thing about this film coming to sell is the mission of the movie’s production company, Santa Monica, Calif.-based Nala Films.
Darlene Caamano Loquet, the band’s president and chief operating officer, told The New York Times that even though she and co-stagger Emilio Diez Barroso have Hispanic roots, their company doesn’t look for films aimed at a concentrate Spanish-speaking audience. In fact, Nala’s stated profession is simply to focus on developing and producing commercial stories that “empower and uplift audiences.”
“To us,” Caamano Loquet said, “the sharpness of Hispanic or Latino themes is not the same as the general entertainment mindset.” She added, “Our object is to make mainstream movies that have people that sound and look like us, because we are the mainstream.
Source: MiamiHerald.com