Tigers Are Not Afraid
Mexican executive Issa Lopez blends dream and abrasive medication war reality in an apparition story advocated by Guillermo del Toro. Moviegoers whose first experience with Guillermo del Toro came in 2001's frequenting The Devil's Backbone may feel a blaze of acknowledgment watching Tigers Are Not Afraid, another confident tale where vagrants must arrangement with the soul world while a fragile living creature and-blood strife (this time, Mexico's medication war) seethes around them. An odd section in the filmography of essayist chief Issa Lopez, a Mexican movie producer known generally for standard parody and sentiment, it might confound frightfulness fans who expectation it speaks to the landing of another type star. That hasn't halted auteurs like del Toro, Neil Gaiman and Stephen King from pointing fans in the movie's bearing — nor should it.