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Latin Land

 Latin Land
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FeatureClass
 Latin Land
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Latin Land
 Latin Land
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LatinLand
 Latin Land
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Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_1'); })South of South of the Border (because Mexico is the only Latin American country in many North Americans' minds), this is the version of the rest of Spanish, Portuguese and very rarely French speaking countries of America in fiction. That's in case there is even a non-Spanish speaking one, because everybody knows that The Capital of Brazil Is Buenos Aires, right?
One big country with different names at best, where the temperature is warm all year round, the buildings are old and rustic, Christianity really is Catholic, and everyone is dirt poor outside of The Cartel and the petty military dictator whose megalomania is inversely proportional to the actual power of his armies (still beats life in Africa, though). Where the universally brown population is made of Tall, Dark, and Handsome Latin Lovers, feisty well-figured women, simple but magnificently moustached men, Street Urchins, and more American missionaries, doctors, scientists and naive tourists than you can shake an M16 at. Also a good place to find great big wildlife, be it of Earth origin (American or not) or extra-terrestrial.
Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_2'); })The Banana Republic part is now fairly inaccurate in Real Life. It's rather a historic penchant for getting in this kind of situation that created the trope. Nothing to do with Ancient Rome.
If you mix this trope with a shot of Tropical Island Adventure, you get Cuba, the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico, and if you add a strong dose of Welcome to the Caribbean, Mon! to that, you get Haiti. If you mix it with a shot of Holiday in Cambodia and/or East Indies, and substitute basketball for The Beautiful Game, you'll get something like the Philippines, though for what it's worth, that country is mixed with so many and so disparate cultural influences—owing to nearly 500 years of Western colonialism more pervasive than almost any other country in its region—that it's a challenge to even represent at all, let alone accurately, in most media; for one, almost all its ancient structures are Catholic churches. Because of this, among other reasons, the country comes off as looking like Asia's own special piece of Latin Land.
Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_3'); })See also: Useful Notes On Latin America. Compare Spexico. Often linked to Developing Nations Lack Cities.
Examples:
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Predator is set in the jungles of fictional Val Verde. The same Banana Republic of Val Verde appears in Commando and Die Hard 2.
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The Road to El Dorado is particularly egregious. The actual legend of El Dorado took place in Colombia, not in Central America as it is depicted in the film, and it was posterior to Cortés' (and Pizarro's) conquests.
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An unusual African example happens in White Collar's two-parter episode "Wanted"/"Most Wanted", in which Neal hides from the FBI in Cape Verde. The episode is filmed entirely in Puerto Rico and there is no attempt to hide it. So while Cape Verde is correctly stated to be a former Portuguese colony, everyone speaks Spanish and has Spanish names. And in spite of Cape Verde being off the coast of Africa and a former hub of the Slave Trade, with a 78% Creole and 21% Black population, the only black people seen are the American FBI agents trying to find Neal.
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In the James Bond movie Licence to Kill, most of the action takes place in the fictional nation of Isthmus, which is blatantly based on Panama, the most famous isthmus in the world. The James Bond movies rarely fictionalize the countries he visits unless the nation gets an extremely unflattering portrayal, and Isthmus being every 80's Latin America stereotype in the book certainly qualifies.
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One Hundred Years of Solitude, written by an author who actually comes from Colombia, is set in a unnamed Banana Republic with all the trappings (dictatorships, rebels, old decrepit towns, and an actual banana plantation) plus An Aesop about why capitalism is bad.
Actually those vague descriptions fit with pretty much all Latin American countries — except of course, the dictatorships which were common back in the time García Marquez wrote the book but not anymore. Gabriel García Marquez was certainly trying to appeal to all such nations.
Actually no, it is just Colombia. The geographical location of Macondo is quite specific: South of La Guajira, passing Cienga. Macondo is just Aracataca with another name. If you want this trope by Garcia Marquez then you have to check The Autumn of the Patriarch.
The setting and lifestyle of Macondo fits pretty well most rather small towns in the South American Amazonian areas, especially in the times it was written. For example, in the extensive Bolivian Amazonia (different from the Bolivian Andean areas and valleys, where there are Mayincatec), it used to be common to joke about extraordinary events and anecdotes by describing the town in question as "another Macondo". However, that doesn't apply to the totality of the Latin American Countries, not even countries as whole.
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"May Day Eve" features a typical upper-class Filipino household between the specific years of 1847 and 1890, explicitly still under Spanish rule, and featuring a central couple with very Latinesque dress, grooming, personality and mannerisms. It's even somewhat plausible that the characters might have Spanish blood, though this isn't a Foregone Conclusion in a colony still largely dominated by Asian genes.
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The state of Paraquat, in the Discworld of A.A. Pessimal. Described as having jungle at one end where it borders Tezuma, then mountains, then wide rolling pampas plains which run on into land variously described as the Steppes or the Prairies depending on whose atlas you are looking at, and formetly a colonial outpost of Toleda. This is an all-inclusive Latin Land. It is of course benevolently ruled by The Generalissimo, currently Augusto Richochet.
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Agualar in the second Finnegan Zwake book is one of these.
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Florodora presents an even more stereotypically-Latin Philippine settingnote perhaps mixed with a bit of proto-Hula and Luaus, the titular island having a lush, tropical, flowery, almost South Pacific-esque character, with many of the local girls, including Dolores, the lead, having typically Hispanic names and explicitly described as "Spanish Girls" in the script, even if there's an even chance they could have native Filipino blood.
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Carmen Sandiego features an episode in Ecuador, including a trip to the mountaintop capital of Quito. Later seasons also take Carmen and her gang to various other Latin American countries, including possible candidates for her parentage in Argentina and Mexico, as well as to Brazil for the Rio Carnaval, and the show takes great pains to demonstrate the cultural differences between all these.
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On the 2007 movie The Reaping, the Chilean city of Concepcion is depicted as a tropical location inside a Banana Republic.
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Played for laughs with Catalina's unnamed native country in My Name Is Earl, which is made of whatever over the top stereotypes about Latin America the writers have in mind in the moment.
In an example of Negative Continuity, Catalina angrily told Joy that she was not Mexican when she called her that, but was later deported to Mexico (the South of the Border version) when she was discovered to be an illegal immigrant. A green card marriage later, she appeared on TV where she was said to be from La Paz, Bolivia.
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As does an episode of Human Target, even though it is obviously filmed in Canada. Guerrero handwaves it by saying that they are near the Andes and it is too cold to run around in a t-shirt.
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Actually no, it is just Colombia. The geographical location of Macondo is quite specific: South of La Guajira, passing Cienga. Macondo is just Aracataca with another name. If you want this trope by Garcia Marquez then you have to check The Autumn of the Patriarch.
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Bogota got this treatment in Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005). The locals were not very pleased.
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 Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005)
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Romancing the Stone is set in Colombia, but all the Hispanic characters speak with a Mexican accent due to the movie being filmed in Mexico.
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Part of the joke in Team America: World Police, where one of the throw away foreign locations is the Panama Canal. All the natives are brown skinned, moustached, and dark haired, wearing stereotypical "Hispanic" dresses including a donkey driver in Mexican poncho and sombrero. They speak Spanish-sounding gibberish with the only intelligible line being ¡No me gusta! ("I don't like it!") said when they die in a flood.
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Indiana Jones:
In Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Indy claims he learned Quechua... while fighting in Pancho Villa's army. He also finds a Mayincatec temple deep in the Brazilian Amazon, built by the "Ugha" people after Ancient Astronauts taught then complicate matters they were apparently too stupid to discover on their own, like farming.
People who got offended by the representation of Peru in Crystal Skull are not advised to read Frank Darabont's earlier draft Indiana Jones and the City of the Gods, where the portrayal is so over the top that people accused Darabont of being racist. For comparison, in Crystal Skull Oxley was put in a rural mental hospital run by nuns that looks more like a prison than a hospital. In City of the Gods, we are told that the whole country has no infrastructure to deal with the mentally ill, so he was used as an attraction in a travelling circus.
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On Heroes and Tombs: Set in Buenos Aires, but inverted to non-Hispanics in that the descriptions would fit New York very well. "City of the Pessimists"
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 On Heroes and Tombs
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Quezon's Game is set in Manila in the Philippines in the late 1930s just before World War II. In this era, though now under American colonial rule proper, Manila (and of course much of the Philippines with it) had been previously under Spanish rule for 300+ years, and so a lot of Hispanic or Latinoesque cultural trappings are evident, like the names, some architectural styles, and cobblestoned streets. note The production even manages to make period Manila look even more Hispanic than the Real Life Manila was by the late 1930s, since it was mostly shot in a purpose-built living museum town, where old Spanish-era houses were transplanted for restoration and where streets are purposely cobblestoned. In reality Manila at the time already had a lot of more modern, 20th-century buildings and flat paved roads; most of these were since destroyed by wartime shelling, or else demolished by politicians and land developers, or otherwise radically modified or left to decay.
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Selena: Jennifer Lopez is American, of Puerto Rican ancestry, and not a fluent speaker of Spanish. This caused a small uproar when she portrayed the Mexican-American singer Selena. Who had also not been a fluent Spanish speaker; her first and fluent language was English. She had only learned Spanish after phonetically singing it, and was never entirely fluent in it.
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Similarly in Clueless, Cher makes her maid Lucy talk to the gardener for her, and tells her it's because Cher doesn't speak "Mexican". This infuriates Lucy, as she is from El Salvador, which Josh explains. Cher doesn't get what the big deal is; Josh points out that Cher gets mad if anyone thinks she lives below Sunset.
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The real Philippines as depicted in Ang Barbaro, which is set in the late Spanish-colonial regime (with its Catholic churches and clergy and its effectively dictatorial governor-general), so a Justified Trope here.
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In an episode of Six Feet Under a Mexican-American family comes to Fisher and Sons to bury their son who was killed in a gang shooting. Nate asks Rico to deal with them, since Rico is Hispanic. Rico takes offense — because Nate assumes that he knows how to deal with gangs, but also because Rico is Puerto Rican, not Mexican.
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The Marvel G.I. Joe comics featured the fictional Banana Republic of Sierra Gordo.
The main Marvel universe has Santo Rica, the republic with a Spanish grammatically incorrect name.
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Amigo, set in the Philippines just after breaking free from Spanish rule, consequently is full of very Catholic Filipinos, mostly with very Hispanic names. There's even a Spanish friar and soldiers!
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Invoked by Don Cheadle's character in Crash. He cuts short a phone call with his mother because he's "having sex with a white woman." He later remarks that she's Mexican. His girlfriend, who is Hispanic but not Mexican, is not amused. Her father came from El Salvador and her mother from Puerto Rico — she helpfully points out, "Neither of those is Mexico." His response: "The question we have to ask ourselves is — who gathered together those remarkably different cultures and taught them all to park their cars on their lawns?" in keeping with its theme of "insult every ethnicity imaginable."
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Without Seeing The Dawn, while set in the American Philippines at the start of World War II in the Pacific, still retains features of this trope, and apart from the Chinese businessmen and signages in American English, it's chock-full of Catholics with (mostly) Hispanic given names and holding (mostly) Catholic rituals, such as weddings and funerals. Not to mention the obvious that said Catholics are mostly working as feudal peons on very Latinesque haciendas (plantations) controlled by abusive landlords—some of who actually have Spanish blood to boot!
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On the other hand, the book does take care in portraying Costa Rica as a stable nation and leading economy in the region with notable achievements in nature conservation and health care. And, well, an Airforce, too.
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One episode of JAG in season 1 takes place in the U.S. Embassy in Peru, and another episode in season 2 takes partially place in the U.S. Embassy in Colombia.
Harm and Mac go to Panama in "The Colonel's Wife".
Also multipart adventures in Paraguay in season 8/9
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San José, Costa Rica in Jurassic Park. Because certainly a small modern city in the middle of a valley surrounded by mountains looks like a Hawaiian beach resort.
On the other hand, the book does take care in portraying Costa Rica as a stable nation and leading economy in the region with notable achievements in nature conservation and health care. And, well, an Airforce, too.
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Airwolf
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Wally Wood's Sally Forth regularly had adventures in fictional Latin American countries, such as Rio de Gringo and the Republic of San Forizo.
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The New Adventures of Superman: In "The Ape Army of the Amazon", the mayor of a Brazilian river village appears to be a Mexican peon.
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 The New Adventures of Superman
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"Dead Stars", if we assume its setting to be contemporary, puts it within American colonial rule, but only a few decades removed from Spanish rule, hence its characters with Hispanic names (e.g. Alfredo Salazar, Esperanza, Julia Salas, etc.) and families with aristocratic bearing, who still use Gratuitous Spanish greetings on each other, and still attend very Catholic fiestas (though in fairness, the last is still true today).
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MacGyver, a number of occasions.
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In Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Indy claims he learned Quechua... while fighting in Pancho Villa's army. He also finds a Mayincatec temple deep in the Brazilian Amazon, built by the "Ugha" people after Ancient Astronauts taught then complicate matters they were apparently too stupid to discover on their own, like farming.
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In Isabel Allende’s novel The House of the Spirits, the actual name of the country is never said, although it is generally accepted that it is the author’s native Chile. Nevertheless, the description and situations could easily happen in any South American country.
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The Sentinel
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hasFeature
Latin Land / int_fb26bc2e

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Hayop Ka!: The Nimfa Dimaano Story (Animation) / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Barangay 143 / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Ang Barbaro (Comic Book) / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Walter Melon (Comic Book) / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Sally Forth (Wood) (Comic Strip) / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 The Loud House: Revamped (Fanfic) / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Amigo / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Balangiga: Howling Wilderness / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Heneral Luna / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 HOUBA! On the Trail of the Marsupilami / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005) / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 One Night in the Tropics / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Pitch Perfect / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Quezon's Game / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Romancing the Stone / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Superman III / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 The Wages of Fear / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 All Along the Watchtower / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 America Is Not the Heart / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Banaag at Sikat / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Heat / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Hotel Oriente / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Jo Gar / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 La Oveja de Nathán / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 May Day Eve / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Nínay / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Tempting Hymn / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 The Order of Melkizedek / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Without Seeing The Dawn / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Eden: It's an Endless World! (Manga) / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Hazbin Hotel: Lucifer's Folly (Roleplay) / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 JAG / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 My Name Is Earl / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 A Portrait of the Artist as Filipino (Theatre) / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Florodora (Theatre) / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Call of Duty: Ghosts (Video Game) / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Wars of Liberty (Video Game) / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Dora the Explorer / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 The New Adventures of Superman / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 The Road to El Dorado / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land
 Nikita / int_330826ca
type
Latin Land