My Family is an outstanding motion picture and a never-ending traditional story. It is a movie which marks out over three age groups of a colonist family's troubles, misfortunes, and achievements. Gregory Nava's movie is an impressively motivated and demonstrative motion picture concerning one Mexican-American family unit in Los Angeles. At its liveliest, the movie appears heaving with jovial Latin melody, life-frightening migration issues and an excellent, leading act by Jimmy Smits (www.movies.nytimes.com).
Discussion
Analysis- Jimmy Smits
The couple, Maria and Jose, the first cohort, moves to Los Angeles and suffer problems of expatriation in the year 1930. They start their family and their children along with the central hero of the movie, Jimmy tackle with early life mores and the law enforcement in the year 1950. As the following age group turn out to be mature in the 1960, the center of attention in movie moves to Jimmy, his nuptials to Isabel (a Salvadorian immigrant), their son, and his drive to turn out to be a conscientious father.
The real picture stealer here has to be Jimmy Smits, who acts as a younger sibling. He, who gets free from penal complex, comes across with aiding his sister, who was an ex- parson. He helped her in putting off the expatriation of an adolescent Salvadoran girl, who faces bereavement if she was to revisit to warfare-stricken El Salvador. At the same time as he is intimidated in getting married with her, he accepts as true that it is only a temporary relationship. But when these two accidental-partners meet and determine the loveliness and support they provide to one another, love is here to continue between them. On the other hand, all cheerful accounts approach with their dreadful closing stages and Jimmy takes this motion picture all the way throughout ...