Mexican actor Gael García Bernal: Sean Penn's interview of 'El Chapo' was a failure

FILE - In this Jan. 10, 2016 file photo, Gael García Bernal poses in the press room after winning the award for best actor in a television series - musical or comedy for Mozart in the Jungle at the 73rd annual Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)

Mexican actor Gael García Bernal said he and Sean Penn agree on something: Penn's Rolling Stone reporting about Mexican drug lord Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán failed in its mission.

In an interview this week, the Golden Globe winner said Penn did not generate discussion about drug criminalization and legalization, wrongly put Guzmán further in the limelight and should have interviewed others more deserving of the attention, such as "people that are changing things for the better."

Bernal explained: "It's better to talk with some like the people who help the migrants, for example, the people that are the victims of this drug war."

Penn recently told CBS' "60 Minutes" he failed in his intention to kick-start a conversation about the U.S. government's approach to the war on drugs when he tracked down Guzmán to write an article for Rolling Stone.

Bernal's comments come less than a month after Golden Globe wins for him and his Amazon Prime comedy "Mozart in the Jungle," which follows the lives of members of a fictitious orchestra. Bernal, who won a best actor award for his character Rodrigo, plays the conductor.

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Bernal declined to respond to questions about the "El Chapo" article at the Golden Globes because reporters who asked him about it didn't take the situation seriously enough.

"We're talking about a drug war that's been killing people all over the world for years and years and years and I've been very close to it. Living in Mexico, I suffer a lot from what's happening in my country."

Bernal said his next film, "Desierto," due out in March, also hits close to home. It's about a group of migrants who come under attack as they try to cross the border from Mexico to the United States. He said it was an action/horror film with a "deep, deep, deep political discussion" within it.

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