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That provocative mix of elements fits Ibarra's reputation for having pushed the popular telenovela form during his 15-year-long career. Ibarra also draws from his journalism background and still writes a news column in the Mexican daily Milenio. Through his production company, Argos Communications, in 1996, Ibarra produced "Nothing Personal," which was the first Mexican telenovela set in the world of politics and drug trafficking. Later, he cast a woman as an antihero in the soap opera "The Gaze of a Woman," adding a novel grittiness to the otherwise rosy genre. Ibarra went on to win three International Emmy nominations with the HBO Latin America production "Capadocia," which takes places in a corrupt women's prison. He knew he was breaking new ground by taking on the Sept. 11 attacks, which Hollywood has so far approached cautiously. Right after the event, images of the imposing skyscrapers were even scrubbed from already filmed scenes in several movies. "There's a resistance in American television that I think it's time to break," Ibarra said. "Ten years let us bring up the subject." U.S. media expert Shari Anne Brill, who writes the blog The Brill Beat, said the decade since the attacks has cleared the way for dramas such as "The Eighth Commandment." "You can't have something started while it's happening," Brill said. "You couldn't have done this show in 2002. People would have been raw. I think marking the 10th anniversary is a really good moment to start to do this show, because 10 years have gone by, people have healed."
Hollywood's hesitancy will end in the weeks leading up to the attack's 10-year anniversary, as Sept. 11-themed dramas and documentaries flood TV screens in the United States. Ibarra, for one, didn't hold back in "The Eighth Commandment." In one of the first episodes, Isabel Sanmillan's son is bullied by a schoolmate who says his mom died from an "overdose of concrete." The show also recreates terrifying moments inside the towers' stairwells during the buildings' collapse. Sanmillan herself is rescued on the tower stairs by an undocumented Mexican immigrant. Later, she calls her husband with her face still bloodied. "We are dealing with it without self-censorship," said Huijara, a past winner of Mexico's equivalent of an Academy Award. "For (Americans), it continues being a subject, in some ways, taboo." To be sure, Ibarra enjoyed the creative freedom that comes with dramatizing another country's disaster. But exploring the subject also became a "powerful trigger" that "allowed the linking of tragedies" such as those that have plagued Mexico, Ibarra said. In its similarly blunt way, Ibarra describes drug-war events and figures such as wanted cartel leader Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman and the activist and poet Javier Sicilia, whose son was killed in March by drug gang members. Brill said the show's depiction of the Sept. 11 attacks and other themes could wake up audiences not just to past horrors but those still under way. "People wander around watching these silly reality shows and get caught up in these stupid things," Brill said. "But they need to wake up and realize that there's some really scary things going on."
[Associated
Press;
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