
Age: 42
male
Alejandro Edda is a Mexican actor, born May 17, 1984 in Puebla, Mexico. Alejandro Edda was born in Puebla, Mexico in 1984. After high school, he studied arts at the Russian Conservatory in Mexico City. At the end of his last year, he goes to join his mother in San Francisco in the United States to pursue an acting career. He then moved to Los Angeles and studied at the Meisner Acting Studio, finishing among the top five students in his class. After a series of short films, Alejandro Edda joined in 2013 the cast of the television series The Bridge, the time of eight episodes. The actor continues his American breakthrough playing the supporting roles in other series such as Fear the Walking Dead and L'Arme Fatale. In 2017, he is part of the prestigious cast of Barry Seal's film: American Traffic by Doug Liman. In this thriller, he plays the role of Jorge Ochoa, a narcotrafiling founding member of the Medellín Cartel, alongside star Tom Cruise. This film marks its first success at the box office. In 2018, he will be seen alongside Catherine Zeta-Jones for the biopic Cocaine Godmother on the baron of drugs Griselda Blanco. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alejandro Edda

Chucho
for Chucho in Signs Preceding the End of the World
Suggested by sepanta_kazemi

Makina is a young woman who moves with quiet precision and sharp instincts. When word reaches her that her brother vanished somewhere in the United States, she steps into the desert with a single mission: cross the border and bring him home. The journey pulls her into a world built on whispers, debts, and shifting loyalties. She slips through cartel safe zones, rides with a coyote who may or may not be trustworthy, and survives a landscape where every shadow hides a threat. The border is not a line. It’s a maze. A test. A place where people vanish without a sound. On the other side, the world feels familiar and foreign at the same time. New streets, new rules, and a language that cuts off pieces of her identity. Makina is forced to navigate neighborhoods where migrants live in the cracks, where authority watches from behind dark glass, and where the wrong move can send someone back across the desert… or worse. But Makina doesn’t break. She observes. She adapts. She pushes forward. As the search draws her deeper into this strange new world, the trail toward her brother becomes more tangled, and Makina must decide how far she is willing to go — and how much of herself she is willing to lose — to bring her family together again. A tense, atmospheric journey through borders seen and unseen. A story about survival, identity, and the quiet strength of someone who refuses to disappear.