Mexican Revolution
The Mexican Revolution is a very complicated series of events, any recommendations for videos/reading material to better understand and learn from it. Young historian here.
One of my favorite books on the Revolution is John Mraz's Photographing the Mexican Revolution: Commitments, Testimonies, Icons. It is specifically focused on the images of the war, but uses them masterfully to trace the course of the conflict. The war produced some stunning photography, thanks to a few factors, including a burgeoning commercial photography industry in Mexico City, as well as the war happening just as cameras were becoming more portable, so it really draws you in in a way few other books on the topic can. Highly recommend it!
I took a class on the Mexican Revolution in college. I recommend Mechanics once and future Revolution, which goes over both the Revolution and its aftermath (which I personally find even more important). It's a quick read too. Also the Knight book mentioned above, and Zapata and the Mexican Revolution by Womack. I have even more recommendations for books about the aftermath of the revolution, like Revolutionary Woven in Post-Revolutionary Mexico, Setting the Virgin on Fire by Becker, and Cultural Politics in Revolution by Vaughan.
John M. Hart's Revolutionary Mexico is still quite good. Valuable in how it discusses the complex economic forces that made the revolution so unpredictable.
If you're looking for a video, The Storm that Swept Mexico is over on YouTube, and features some excellent historians like Friedrich Katz.
Late to the party, but I strongly recommend Alan Knight's 2 volume "Mexican Revolution" and Friedrich Katz's "Secret War in Mexico." Both are phenomenal.