This is a poster of a Mexican fictional film that depicts Mexican Revolution.
El ojo de vidrio (The Glass Eye) is a 1969 Mexican revolution-epic film directed by René Cardona Jr., starring Antonio Aguilar, Flor Silvestre, Manuel Capetillo, Eleazar García, Alejandro Reyna and Guillermo Rivas. With a backdrop of the Mexican Revolution, the film recounts the story of former horse wrangler and bandit Porfirio Alcalá y Buenavista who becomes the subject of a popularly known corrido along with his four cousins, after being notoriously heroic for raiding rich landlords and helping the poor. Being each notable for having one eye as the result of an injustice, the five heroes meet two townswomen and a theater actor who helps them disguise for their various raids. As their last raid attack, they take vengeance to the man who caused their tragedy and evade revolutionary troops who call for peace after Porfirio Díaz resigns and is exiled (Wiki)
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Director: Emilio Fernández
Year: 1943
Country: Mexico
Dolores del Río and Pedro Armendáriz acted in this movie. Although not directly related to the Mexican Revolution, the story is set in a pre-revolutionary Mexico. The genre of the film is "indigenist."
Keller, Gary D. “THE IMAGE OF THE CHICANO IN MEXICAN, UNITED STATES, AND CHICANO CINEMA: AN OVERVIEW.” Bilingual Review / La Revista Bilingüe, vol. 10, no. 2/3, 1983, pp. 9–208. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/25744057. Accessed 21 Apr. 2020.
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Shadow of Pancho Villa was a fictional 1933 film released by Columbia Pictures.
Director: Miguel Contreras Torres, Antonio Moreno.
Miguel Contreras Torres participated in the Mexican Revolution as a part of the Carranza's army. The movie was produced by Hispano Continental Films.
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Source: http://www.elem.mx/autor/datos/1312
Pueblo en armas was a film that was directed by Miguel Contreras Torres. It was based on his 1957 novel by the same name.
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Director: Miguel Contreras Torres
Country: Mexico
In this film, Mexican singer and actress Flor Silvestre plays a lead load portraying a Soldadera.
The movie is based on a novel by Miguel Contreras Torres, "Pueblo en armas."
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Author: Contreras Torres, Miguel.
Published: México, 1957.
This novel served as a basis for two Mexican movies by Miguel Contreras Torres. One was "La Soldadera," and the other had the same name, "Pueblo en Armas."
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Director: Juan Bustillo Oro and Fernando de Fuentes.
Year: 1934
Country: Mexico.
Actors: Carmen Guerrero and Antonio Fausto.
Summary from IMDB:
"During the Mexican Revolution, Rosalio Mendoza (Del Diestro) survives by making and winning favors from both factions, the governmental forces, and Zapata's Army. His hacienda welcomes everybody, and Mendoza is considered a good friend of his guests. Eventually, the situation becomes unsustainable and he has to take sides. Betrayal and deception overcome and Mendoza's dark side surfaces. by Maximiliano Maza <mmaza@campus.mty.itesm.mx>."
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Director: René Cardona
Country: Mexico
Caballo prieto azabache (La tumba de Villa) is a 1968 Mexican historical drama film starring Antonio Aguilar, Flor Silvestre, and Jaime Fernández. It focuses on a horse breeder named Jesús who is set on buying a horse known as "Caballo prieto" (dark horse) and pursuing a relationship with a singer named Genoveva Alarios. With he and Genoveva eventually recruited as spies for the revolutionary leader Pancho Villa (Wiki).
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Director: Emilio Fernandez
Year: 1946
Country: Mexico
Synopsis extracted from Wikipedia: The revolutionary José Juan Reyes (Pedro Armendáriz) takes the town of Cholula, Puebla and demands contributions from its wealthiest citizens for the Mexican Revolution. However, his plans are disrupted when he falls in love with the Señorita Beatriz Peñafiel (María Félix), the tempestuous daughter of the town's richest man.
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Director: Sergio Leone
Country: Italy
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This film narrates the fictional events of the Mexican Revolution that took place around the year 1910. The protagonists of the film are Juan Miranda, who is a fugitive from the law, and John Mallory, who is a revolutionary of Irish descent whose lives get entangled in the Revolution. This film's genre is also known as "Zapata Western."
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