Meet the Man Who Cast All the Cars in the New Movie Lowriders
The cars in the new film Lowriders, set to be released Friday, may be more impressive than the actual movie.
The film, set in Los Angeles, follows a young Mexican-American street artist (Gabriel Chavarria) as he struggles between choosing to pursue his dream of being an artist or following the path his father has cleared for him at the family-owned car body shop.
Lowriders is the first release from Telemundo Films. The Spanish-language broadcast network is venturing into developing, producing, and marketing feature films in English and Spanish for the Latinx market, which represents about 18% of the population, but make up 23% of frequent moviegoers, according to a 2016 study from the Motion Picture Association of America. For comparison, white people account for 62% of the population and make up about 51% of frequent moviegoers.
Latino moviegoers have long held a connection with car movies. They have supported the Fast & Furious franchise since it was established in 2001. In 2015, Latinx moviegoers made up 37% of Furious 7‘s ticket buyers, followed by white moviegoers at 25% and African-Americans at 24%.
Despite the Latinx power at the box office, the group is still grossly underrepresented in films. A study by the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School for Communications and Journalism found that in 2015, only 5.3% of characters in 800 movies reviewed were Latinx. White actors landed 73.7% of the roles; black actors followed with 12.2%.
Lowriders offers a meaningful glimpse into the lives of young U.S.-born Latinos and lowrider culture, but admittedly feels overwritten. The film’s most engaging and authentic cultural moments all happen in and around the lowrider cars—the custom, reimagined classics popular amongst Mexican-Americans and Chicanos. The quintessential mechanical modification is often a hydraulic suspension system that allows the car to be driven really low or much higher off the road or even bounce.A lowrider is a customized car, but it can also be a person who is part of the community. Some historians say the term lowrider stems from the practice of riding “slow and low” on the boulevard.
“I have a love and appreciation for four wheels and metal that goes fast and goes slow,” Mister Cartoon told Fusion in an interview this week. Mister Cartoon, real name Mark Machado, is one of the executive producers of the film and helped cast the cars in the movie.
“[The film] is straight car porn,” Cartoon told me.