Luis Buñuel's disquieting and difficult masterpiece Los Olvidados is a landmark in 50's neo-realism and an unflinching lament for the human condition lacking sentiment or sugarcoating — also one of the first and finest features about juvenile delinquents. Los Olvidados (The Forgotten Ones) is a painful relevant look on poverty made all the more powerful from the point of the views of kids.

Since 1950, when "Los Olvidados" was released to angry cries from Mexican officials who thought it would ruin the country's morale, Luis Bunuel's early masterpiece has been going for the gut. Los Olvidados- Scene Analysis (28:30)-(31:20) Los Olvidados, a Mexican movie directed by a Spanish director, Luis Buñuel, is a movie about children who live in the slums of Mexico. Jabio is an ex-felony who has just came out of the juvenile detention. "I hope they'll kill every one of them before they are born." ... it is the poetic departure from this reality that makes Los Olvidados so riveting. Los Olvidados (The Young and the Damned), an “attack on the sadness that ruins children before they have a chance,” was penned by Buñuel, Madcap writer Luis Alcoriza, and an uncredited Larrea. When Los Olvidados premiered in Mexico City, however, it was met with full-scale hostility, as audiences felt the film demeaned the entire nation for its grim picture of Mexican youth. Pedro is one of the kids who are friends with Jabio. Creation of the Aragonese Short Film Contest and the Premio Los Olvidados (Los Olvidados Award), established by the Gobierno de Aragón and endowed with a studies grant in coordination with the Festival de Cine de Fuentes de Ebro. (see es:Los olvidados as a point of comparison.) The mean older sibling of every hell-is-for-children shocker from Pixote to Kids and Ratcatcher. One of the reasons Buñuel is so difficult to categorize is that over the course of his career as a filmmaker, he went through three easily differentiated major phases …

54, April 1997. LOS OLVIDADOS (The Forgotten Ones) is a timeless masterpiece of Luis Buñuel’s filmography. Set at the heart of one of the many slums of Mexico City’s post-World War II era, the movie evidences that the hailed prosperity of the period has denied the poor its share. The producer closed the film only three days after its release, and it looked like the film would be a total loss. * * * Los olvidados was Luis Buñuel's favorite film, and the one with which he returned to mainstream motion picture directing after a 17-year hiatus. I'd fix this myself but unfortunately this is a redirect to the page with the incorrect title. Los Olvidados, or "The Forgotten Ones", is a Mexican rebel organization on Mayans MC, a spin-off of the FX original series Sons of Anarchy. Los Olvidados is the odd bird of Luis Buñuel’s long, many-complexioned filmography, the film where Buñuel’s favored protective defenses, surrealism and satire, come crashing down, exposing a heart sharply attuned to the injustice of poverty. Gaytan, F., "Los Olvidados and Its Second Ending," in Journal ofFilm Preservation (Brussels), no.

Los Olvidados Set in Mexico, Luis Buñuel’s ruthless—almost surgical—examination of how the poor prey on one another is the most horrifying of all films about juvenile crime. –Andyluciano 02:35, 15 November 2007 (UTC) I would support such a change.