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Stephanie Sigman plays Laura, a beauty queen drawn unwillingly into a Mexican drug gang, in the film Miss Bala.

Eniac Martinez/20th Century Fox Stephanie Sigman plays Laura, a beauty queen drawn unwillingly into a Mexican drug gang, in the film Miss Bala.
If you read the headlines, you know that the Mexican government is engaged in a long, deadly battle against the country's astonishingly powerful drug dealers, known as narcotraficantes or simply narcos. Hardly a day goes by without news of another shootout or massacre. Nearly 50,000 people have died in the 5-year-old drug war, the majority of them innocent citizens.
Naturally, such a reality has a painful effect on the psyches of ordinary people forced to live amid the madness. And this is the subject of the remarkable movie Miss Bala, written and directed by the brilliant young Mexican filmmaker Gerardo Naranjo. Focusing tightly on the absurd travails of one young woman, this searing, exaggerated, sometimes weirdly funny film plays like a cross between Franz Kafka and No Country for Old Men.
Set in and around Tijuana, in the northern Mexican state of Baja, Miss Bala tells the story of Laura Guerrero (Stephanie Sigman), a pretty, innocent 23-year-old whose family runs a clothing stall. Laura has big dreams, and to make them come true, she enters the Miss Baja beauty pageant. So far so good. But later that evening, she follows her friend Suzu to a disco, and there things go terribly wrong: Narcos burst in and start gunning people down.
Laura escapes, just barely. But when she tries to find out what happened to Suzu, she makes a fateful mistake: She asks the help of a policeman. Before she knows it, she's in the hands of dangerously capricious drug boss Lino Valdez (Noe Hernandez).
Laura desperately wants to get away, but there's nowhere to go. And soon Lino begins forcing her to perform tasks she doesn't want to do for men whose intentions she rarely understands. All she knows is that, wherever she turns up, people get killed. Laura goes from hoping to be Miss Baja to becoming Miss Bala, which is Spanish for "bullet."
Now, there are a lot of bullets in Miss Bala, but part of what makes the film so masterful is its striking way of portraying violence. You see, most violent movie scenes are shot and edited to make the killing and mayhem as exciting as possible. The camera encourages us to identify with the violence, either by making it seem cool or by focusing on a hero whose own violence we're urged to cheer on.
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