Niño Santo (2011– )
6/10
Niño Santo - The Green Inferno
27 August 2016
Warning: Spoilers
*** This review may contain spoilers ***

*Plot and ending analyzed*

Niño Santo was on Spanish TV for a while, but then it disappeared. I started watching it while living in Colombia. It started out interesting, with a creepy feeling to the whole thing. I liked the secluded jungle setting.

Some medical students visit an isolated village that is infected with some disease, but what they discover is startling. They find the people in terror and some weird 'saint-type' man who may be able to cure people. He controls the whole place.

Ultimately it seems that it may cast the realm of science and medicine against the realm of superstition. In South America there are still plenty of curanderos ('faith healing'), and products that are intended to cure all types of ailments. Most of it is quackery and rubbish, but the plants of the Amazon do indeed produce cures. I visited the rainforest once and got severely ill with fever. The only helpful person was an old man from a jungle tribe who treated me with plants. Within a week I was already feeling better. I was amazed by the panacea that I had been given.

Diego Luna and Gael García Bernal were the producers.

Niño Santo was filmed in Mexico, so it's nice to see it on TV again. I don't know why they took it off the television, and it seems to have been forgotten about. I don't even know how it all ended.

In Spanish with no subtitles.
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