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Trade

2007, 120 minutes

Adriana is a 13-year-old girl from Mexico City whose kidnapping by sex traffickers sets in motion a desperate mission by her 17-year-old brother...

Starring: Kevin Kline, Cesar Ramos, Alicja Bachleda, Paulina Gaitan, Marco Pérez, Linda Emond, Zack Ward, Kate del Castillo, Tim Reid, Pasha D. Lychnikoff, Natalia Traven, Guillermo Iván, Christian Vasquez...

Directed by
Marco Kreuzpaintner
MPAA rating
R (Restricted)
Released
Over 4 years ago
IMDB rating

7.5 out of 10

IMDB page


Torrent information

Uploaded
Over 2 years ago
Downloaded
1224 times
Files size
699.3 MB in 3 files
Status
Sr10 37 seeders, 11 leechers
Last updated 5 months ago

Release details

Source
DVDRip
Group name
FXG
Video info.
XviD, 700 kbps, 656x272 px, 23 FPS
Audio info.
MP3, 112 kbps

Movie review

Trade, a controversial drama that aims to enlighten viewers to the horrors of the international sex slave trade, functions in a somewhat documentary mode due to its purposefully repellent nature. Written by Jose Rivera, who also adapted to screen the Motorcycle Diaries, Trade opens in Mexico City where a tourist, Weronika (Alicja Bachleda-Curus), is kidnapped right before a thirteen year-old Mexican girl, Adriana (Paulina Gaitan) is yanked off her bike and pushed into a black Mercedes. Quickly, the two young women meet in various squalid conditions, alternating turns of abuse and rape with sleazy men who prepare them for international sale over the Internet. A vengeful plot kicks in once Adriana's brother, Jorge (Cesar Ramos) and Texas policeman, Ray Sheridan (Kevin Kline), fatefully unite to rescue Adriana in hopes of eliminating this repugnant operation. Trade is nothing short of a melodrama; the script is overwrought, and many scenes are morbid and graphic. When Adriana has been captured by U.S. border patrol, sits in prison, and a Texas high school student offers her, in Spanish, friendship and an issue of Glamour magazine, one feels the soap opera line being crossed. However, the political message in Trade is strong and preaching aside, viewers may realize that any exposure of women's rights violations is for the greater good. —Trinie Dalton

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