Movies Starring Juan Diego Botto
El Greco
Nick Ashdon, Juan Diego Botto, Laia Marull, Lakis Lazopoulos, Dimitra Matsouka, Sotiris Moustakas, Dina Konsta, Giorgos Hristodoulou, Dimitris Kalivokas, Yorgos Charalabidis, Theo Zouboulidis, Lida Protopsalti, Katerina Helmy, Fermí Reixach, Roger Coma
DIRECTOR:Yannis Smaragdis
El Greco is a Greek film about the life of the Greek painter Doménicos Theotokópoulos (El Greco). It was produced in 2007, directed by Yannis Smaragdis and written by Jackie Pavlenko and Dimitris Siatopoulos (book). A dramatization of the life of 16th century Greek painter, Doménicos Theotokópoulos, who, in search of freedom and love, sets off from Crete and goes to Venice and finally Toledo.
Bordertown
Lies. Corruption. Murder. One reporter will break the silence.
Jennifer Lopez, Antonio Banderas, Kate del Castillo, John Norman, Irineo Alvarez, Richard Barela, Randall Batinkoff, Juan Diego Botto, Julio Cedillo, Dave Colon, Peter Gonzales Falcon, Juanes, Rene Rivera, Martin Sheen, Chris Talley
DIRECTOR:Gregory Nava
Lauren (Jennifer Lopez), an impassioned American reporter for the Chicago Sentinel heads to Juarez, a Mexican bordertown, in order to investigate a series of mysterious slayings involving young factory women from all over Mexico. As she discovers hundreds of victims, she gains the trust of local factory workers but falls into danger.
The Dancer Upstairs
An honest man caught in a world of intrigue, power and passion.
John Malkovich, Javier Bardem, Laura Morante, Juan Diego Botto, Luís Miguel Cintra, Oliver Cotton, Elvira Mínguez, Alexandra Lencastre, Javier Manrique, Abel Folk, Marie-Anne Berganza, Lucas Rodríguez, Xabier Elorriaga, Natalia Dicenta, Wolframio Sinué, Ramiro Jiménez
DIRECTOR:John Malkovich
The story of Detective Agustin Rejas, a man clinging to the hope of an impossible love in an impossible world. Tracking Ezequiel, a delusional anarchist who incites the downtrodden masses to join in his brutal revolution against the fascist government in their unnamed Latin American country, Rejas finds solace in his sense of self-respect and the joy that his daughter and wife bring him. Then he meets Yolanda—his daughter's soulfully beautiful ballet teacher—a woman who sparks his long-forgotten passions and represents all that is good and all that is corrupt in their troubled country. But she, who appears to be a shelter from the storm, may in actuality be the storm's eye. Ultimately, as the revolution intensifies and the net closes around hunter and hunted alike, the dancer's truth will prove as elusive as the revolutionary's cause and the detective's peace.



