Busi Cortés

Busi Cortés Trailers

My Normalicovidad Trailer

Luz Eugenia Cortés Rocha, better known as Busi Cortés (Mexico City, June 18, 1950 - June 21, 2024), was a Mexican filmmaker, screenwriter, documentary filmmaker and professor. Her work as a director and screenwriter has been relevant for her country's cinema for her feminine perspective and for making visible the political presence of women in Mexico.

Most Popular Busi Cortés Trailers

Total trailers found: 9

Serpientes y escaleras Trailer (1992)

04 December 1992

Two young girls used to play Serpents and Ladders. One of them always won, but they are very close friends.

Let It Be (1970-1974) Trailer (1993)

09 July 1993

Chapter 15 of the series 18 decades of life in Mexico in the twentieth century. Images of the cultural, social and political life in Mexico from 1970 to 1974.

The Buenoromeros Trailer (1979)

01 January 1979

Three sisters living together are tied to the memory of their father. They welcome their suitors into their home and then repeat a ritual that seems to come from times past.

El lugar del corazón Trailer (1983)

01 January 1983

Three Junior high school girls plan to put an innocent spell on their old history teacher, but surprisingly the spell begins to work.

Un frágil retorno Trailer (1981)

01 March 1981

Hotel Villa Goerne Trailer (1981)

01 January 1981

A Literature professor arrives at a provincial hotel, lonely and consumed. All of the sudden he becomes wrapped up in a game of superstitions that the two women and the young girl that serve him lay out.

A Good Death Beats a Dull Life Trailer (2006)

07 April 2006

The women of a prosperous provincial family hide unsuspected secrets which range from the entanglements of love to murder for mercy or for greed.

Romelia's Secret Trailer (1988)

04 December 1988

The way three different generations of women view virginity and the mystery that a love story hides.

My Normalicovidad Trailer (2022)

28 April 2022

The resilience of Mexico City's residents as they endure one of the world's longest COVID-19 lockdowns.