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Amores perros was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 2000 and won the Ariel Award for Best Picture from the Mexican Academy of Film. The soundtrack includes songs by Latin American rock bands including Café Tacuba, Control Machete, and Bersuit Vergarabat. The film was released under its Spanish title in the English-speaking world, although it was sometimes translated as Love's a Bitch in marketing. The title is a pun in Spanish the word "perros", which literally means "dogs", can also be used to refer to misery, so that it roughly means 'bad loves' with canine connotations. The stories are linked in various ways, including the presence of dogs in each of them. The stories centre on a teenager in the slums who gets involved in dogfighting a model who seriously injures her leg and a mysterious hitman. The film is constructed as a triptych: it contains three distinct stories connected by a car accident in Mexico City.
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It makes use of the multi-narrative hyperlink cinema style and features an ensemble cast. Amores perros is the first installment in González Iñárritu's "Trilogy of Death", succeeded by 21 Grams and Babel. Amores perros is a 2000 Mexican psychological drama film directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu and written by Guillermo Arriaga.
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