A sensual, funny, and quietly devastating coming-of-age road movie that uses youthful desire to explore class, mortality, and the social fabric of Mexico. It’s as emotionally sharp as it is freewheeling, with a voiceover structure and observational detail that make the whole film feel lived-in and inevitable.
93% ★★★★★ (564,013)
Y Tu Mamá También
Where to watch: Netflix
Movie · Drama · Romance · NR
2001 · 1h 46m · ★ 93% (564K)
Life has its ways of teaching.
Director: Alfonso Cuarón
Starring: Maribel Verdú, Gael García Bernal, Diego Luna
Overview
In Mexico, two teenage boys and an attractive older woman embark on a road trip and learn a thing or two about life, friendship, sex, and each other.
Director
Alfonso Cuarón
Production
Bésame Mucho Pictures, Anhelo Productions
Cast
Maribel Verdú, Gael García Bernal, Diego Luna, Daniel Giménez Cacho, Diana Bracho, Verónica Langer, María Aura, Emilio Echevarría, Marta Aura, Silverio Palacios, Ana López Mercado, Andrés Almeida, Nathan Grinberg, Giselle Audirac, Arturo Ríos, Juan Carlos Remolina, Liboria Rodríguez, Mayra Sérbulo, Andrea López, Amaury Sérbulo
Where to watch
Netflix, Netflix Standard with Ads
Curator Review
Verdict
A sensual, funny, and quietly devastating coming-of-age road movie that uses youthful desire to explore class, mortality, and the social fabric of Mexico. It’s as emotionally sharp as it is freewheeling, with a voiceover structure and observational detail that make the whole film feel lived-in and inevitable.
Best for
fans of adult coming-of-age stories
viewers who like road movies with emotional and political subtext
people drawn to frank depictions of sex and friendship
fans of lyrical, observational filmmaking
audiences who appreciate bittersweet endings
Skip if
you want a plot-driven movie with constant twists
you’re uncomfortable with explicit sexual content
you prefer straightforward romance over messy, shifting relationships
you dislike narration that comments on the action
you want a lighthearted teen comedy without melancholy
Overview
Y Tu Mamá También is one of the great road movies of the 2000s because it keeps expanding beyond its own premise. What begins as a reckless summer adventure between two teenage boys and an older woman gradually reveals itself as a story about class, privilege, desire, and the end of innocence. The film is playful, but it never treats its characters as jokes, even when they are being foolish or cruel.
Worth noting
The narration gives the movie a strange, intimate authority, as if the world itself is quietly correcting the boys’ self-importance. That perspective makes the film feel both expansive and precise: the landscapes are sun-baked and sensual, but the emotional undercurrent is always moving toward loss. By the time the trip reaches its final emotional destination, the film has become something much sadder and more mature than a sexual coming-of-age story.
Bottom line
It’s also beautifully performed, with an easy chemistry that makes the central triangle feel spontaneous rather than schematic. The result is a film that remains funny, provocative, and deeply moving on repeat viewings, especially if you’re interested in how personal awakening and social reality can collide in the same frame.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Omar! (3.5★) · 27055 likes
It's stupid how many times I thought something was wrong when the sound stopped for the narrator to speak.
vicky (4★) · 17849 likes
two bros wanking on diving boards 5 feet apart cause they’re not gay
Karsten (5★) · 12349 likes
Watched for a project I’m working on that may or may not end up on the channel, genuinely not sure. Very much in love with this movie. The way it starts with sex as a way of depicting union and ends in a split as though this whole thing was one giant transformation into something that’s been subtly (debatable) teased throughout the entire film. That something being how society, specifically Mexico at this time, disrupts love. In the end you
russman (3.5★) · 10071 likes
Every time I meet someone new, I want everything to go silent and a voice-over tell me about his or her past.