In the landscape of modern Latin American cinema, few films have achieved the unprecedented, grassroots success of Asu Mare (2013). Directed by Ricardo Maldonado and based on the autobiographical stand-up routine of comedian Carlos Alcántara, the film is more than just a box office hit—it is a cultural touchstone for Peru.
The film is not without its detractors. Critics argue that the sequels rely too heavily on crude bathroom humor and that the original film glosses over the darker realities of 1980s Peru (specifically the internal conflict with Shining Path). However, even haters concede that Asu Mare made Peruvian studios realize that local stories, told in local slang, could beat Hollywood blockbusters at the local box office.
The film is a semi-autobiographical retelling of the life of "Cachín" (played by Alcántara), a young man from the working-class neighborhood of San Borja in Lima.
Asu Mare is the Peruvian Breakfast Club , Goodfellas , and Tommy Boy rolled into one. It is a love letter to the Lima street vendor, the strict mother, and the hopeless romantic who never quite grows up. Whether you find it profound or profane, there is no denying that when a Peruvian shouts "Asu mare!" in a dark theater, they are celebrating the messy, beautiful reality of their own life.