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- While on vacation in Mexico, Chloe, a ritzy Beverly Hills chihuahua, finds herself lost and in need of assistance in order to get back home.
- A psychotic criminal couple kidnaps a random teenage couple. The woman rapes the male captive, and lets him watch his lover being raped by the man. They then plan to sacrifice the couple.
- Mexican wrestler El Santo invents a time machine. After somebody uses the machine to find the hidden location of Drácula's treasure, El Santo must hunt down the vampire.
- A group of teenagers in Mexico City set out to enrich their lives.
- It is May 1520 in the vast Aztec Empire one year after the Spanish Conqueror Hernán Cortés' arrival in Mexico. "The Other Conquest" opens with the infamous massacre of the Aztecs at the Great Temple of Tenochtitlan [what is now called Mexico City]. The sacred grounds are covered with the countless bodies of priests and nobility slaughtered by the Spanish Armies under Cortés' command. The lone Aztec survivor of the massacre is a young Indian scribe named Topiltzin [Damián Delgado]. Topiltzin, who is the illegitimate son of the Aztec Emperor Moctezuma, survives the onslaught by burying himself under a stack of bodies. As if awakening from a dream, the young man rises from among the dead to find his mother murdered, the Spanish in power and the dawn of a new era in his native land. A New World with new leaders, language, customs... and God. Representing the New Order is the Spanish Friar Diego [José Carlos Rodríguez]. His mission is to convert the "savage" natives into civilised Christians; to replace their human sacrifices and feathered deities with public Christenings and fealty to the Blessed Virgin Mary. With Topiltzin, Friar Diego faces his most difficult spiritual and personal challenge, for when Topiltzin is captured by Spanish troops and presented to Cortés [Iñaki Aierra], the Spanish Conqueror places Topiltzin's conversion under Friar Diego's care. Old world confronts the New as Topiltzin struggles to preserve his own beliefs, whilst Friar Diego attempts to impose his own. All the while, the question remains: who is converting who?
- A reporter investigates Island of the Dolls (Mexico) where several unsolved murders took place in the 1950s.
- Based on the international hit song, 'Pedro Navaja (Peter the Knife)' is the story of the coolest street-smart hustler ever to walk the streets of Mexico City. The police are after him, his rivals are after him, and all the while the most beautiful women of Mexico are in the cup of his hand.
- In Xochimilco 1909, María Candelaria and Lorenzo Rafael long for getting married but the odds are against them. María Candelaria is segregated for being a prostitute's child and the couple faces the greed of Mr. Damian, the town's shop owner who secretly desires María. When María falls sick with Malaria, Lorenzo Rafael steals a quinine bottle from Damian's shop, unleashing tragedy for the lovers.
- Three sisters run brothels protected by the authorities, abuse and prostitute young women under the false pretense of employing them as servants.
- A man called "The Devil" makes a living in cock-fights. He falls for a girl who's about to enter the monastery.
- A watchman is murdered at a building site. The film narrates several versions of the people involved. Based on the Vicente Lenero novel.
- A man who has been mutilated in boyhood encounters numerous difficulties because of it. His frustration at being unable to culminate his relationships with women eventually drives him to drastic actions.
- A womanizer loses an important part of his genitals.
- After mistakenly going to jail, Maria makes friends with a woman whose kids live in the streets and Maria gets the idea to help them.
- After seeing their parents killed, three young girls escape in the protection of an outlaw.
- A lady is in love with an older man, all the trouble behind the romance.
- Four poor artist friends love and lose in a La Boheme inspired plot.
- Durante la conquista de México por los españoles, Rodri, un náufrago español y Tizcuitl, la joven y bella hija azteka del rey de Tlacopan, poderoso súbdito del emperador Moctezuma, viven una historia de amor en un momento de -salto de algo- histórico donde el fundamentalismo prevalecía sobre los sentimientos individuales.
- El violetero has "Tintan" the main actor's nickname, as an Indian door to door flower seller in colonial Mexico's neighborhood of Xochimilco. One day he is requested by one of his customers to fix their garden and this becomes a recurring job. His new boss, a well educated woman sets to prove her younger sister wrong about their position in life by polishing the new gardener's education and manners. After some time they even go into business together with a flower shop. Perhaps a romance blossoms.
- After a party in a village, an earthquake occurs and the priest says that it is the end of the world so that everyone will repent.
- Ramón y Socorro, a 50-year-old couple, owners of a tavern, embarks on a long trip to Mexico to attend the wedding of their son, Carlos, with Gloria, the daughter of an important Mexican businessman. Upon arriving in Mexico, Ramón discovers that in this country there is a divorce. Fed up with his wife, he decides to divorce without taking into account that he will soon pay the consequences of this act.