Nora had a plan. It would bring her grumpy ex-husband José and the rest of their dysfunctional family together for a magnificent Passover feast. But there is a flaw in her plan - a mysterious photograph from the past that leads José to re-examine their relationship and, perhaps, to rediscover their undying love for each other.
Winner of the Best Picture Award at the 2010 Ariel Awards, Mexico's most prestigious film prize. Like Katherine Bigelow, the 2010 Oscar winner for The Hurt Locker, writer/director Mariana Chenillo is the first female director to win an Ariel Award for Best Picture.
Generously underwritten by Brighton Memorial Chapel
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