The Blue Room (Spanish: La habitación azul) is a 2002 Mexican-Spanish film produced by Argos Cine and directed by Walter Doehner.
Despite that the evidence is enough to convict them, on a hunch, Garduño decides to pay a last visit to Dora, by sneaking into the kitchen of her bakery-shop, he finds that Dora was the source of the anonymous tip, as well as finding boxes of the same rat poison used to kill Ana, Garduño then confronts Dora with this who tearfully confesses having poisoned Toño's wife in order to frame both him and Andrea of murder, since several years back her husband never forgave her of cheating on him, and as a result she never owned any of her shop, with her only son, Nicolás', death it would only be a matter of time for Andrea to seize the entire shop and leave her with nothing.
Billboards and ads on public transport and in magazines, etc., showed the same or a similar picture, raising controversy thanks to Llaca's nudity.
In some media, her buttocks were then digitally covered with a blanket to calm the sensitivities of offended Mexicans.
The film itself was indeed highly erotic, showing full nude scenes of both Patricia Llaca and Juan Manuel Bernal.