Yahoo Web Search

  1. Once Upon a Time in Mexico

    Once Upon a Time in Mexico

    R2003 · Action · 1h 41m

Search results

  1. Sep 12, 2003 · Once Upon a Time in Mexico: Directed by Robert Rodriguez. With Antonio Banderas, Salma Hayek, Johnny Depp, Mickey Rourke. Hitman "El Mariachi" becomes involved in international espionage involving a psychotic CIA agent and a corrupt Mexican general.

    • Robert Rodriguez
    • 492
    • 2 min
  2. Once Upon a Time in Mexico (also known as Desperado 2) is a 2003 American neo-Western action film written, directed, produced, photographed, scored, and edited by Robert Rodriguez. It is the sequel to Desperado (1995) and the third and final installment in the Mexico Trilogy .

    • $98.8 million
    • Robert Rodriguez
    • $29 million
    • September 12, 2003
  3. Oct 14, 2020 · Starring Antonio Banderas, Salma Hayek, Johnny Depp, Mickey Rourke, Eva Mendes, Enrique Iglesias, and Willem Dafoe ONCE UPON A TIME IN MEXICO is a full-frontal assault....

    • Oct 14, 2020
    • 381K
    • Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
  4. Sep 12, 2003 · The saga continues as El Mariachi makes his way across a rugged landscape on the blood trail of Barrillo (Willem Dafoe), a cartel kingpin with one last score to settle who is planning a coup d'etat...

    • (8.6K)
    • Robert Rodriguez
    • R
    • Antonio Banderas
  5. Once Upon a Time in Mexico (2003) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  6. Action. Leaping back into action, gun-slinging, guitar-toting hero "El Mariachi" is back in town in ONCE UPON A TIME IN MEXICO, as director Robert Rodriguez delivers the epic final chapter of his pulp Western trilogy. Starring Antonio Banderas, Salma Hayek, Johnny Depp, Mickey Rourke, Eva Mendes, Enrique Iglesias and Willem Dafoe ONCE UPON A ...

  7. People also ask

  8. Sep 12, 2003 · Once Upon a Time in Mexico. Roger Ebert September 12, 2003. Tweet. Now streaming on: Powered by JustWatch. After Robert Rodriguez made his $7,000 first film "El Mariachi" (1992) and his $3 million "Desperado" (1995), Quentin Tarantino told him they were the Mexican equivalent of Sergio Leone's first two spaghetti Westerns.

  1. People also search for