La Cucharacha (1959) Director: Ismael Rodriguez Country: Mexico Starring Maria Felix, the film depicts the life of the Mexican women soldiers, "Las Soldaderas." Fair Academic Use Only. This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Director :Emilio Fernández
Year: 1946
Country: Mexico.
Mexican filmmaker Emilio Fernandez' "Enamorada" was a 1946 Mexican movie that was released in the United States in 1947.The film's English-language title is "A Woman in Love.", Maria Felix portrays principal character-Beatriz. The movie is set sometime during the Mexican Revolution and details the romantic relationship between aristocratic Beatriz (Felix) and revolutionary General Reyes (Pedro Armendariz). General Reyes is out for vengeance against the aristocracy but he cannot harm Beatriz. The story of transformation highlights Beatriz's hatred turning into love for General.
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Director:
Year: 1939
Country: Mexico
This film is based on a novel that has the same name-"Los de Abajo." It was written by Mariano Azuela.
Synopsis. During the time of the revolution, where the poor, fed up with living in misery and enduring the atrocities committed by the central authorities, decided to follow a thief dubbed as General Demetrio Macías. He, with "La Pintada," chooses to lead his people to victory.
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Director: Elia Kazan
Year: 1952
Country: USA
Actors: Marlon Brando, Anthony Quinn and others.
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Director: Francesco Taboada Tabone.
Country: Mexico
Year: 2002
Publisher's description: Almost one hundred years later after the 1910 Mexican Revolution, the last of the soldiers who fought beside General Emiliano Zapata offer their chilling testimony of the Liberation Army of the South. They speak on the failure of the Revolution and of today's neoliberal governments, of the agrarian and ecological disaster threatening their country and of the looming civil war if the Zapatista ideals they represent continue to be ignored (Source: Amazon).
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This fictional silent film narrates the story of the Talamantes family who are executed for being supporters of the revolution. The widow of Talamantes vows and secures the revenge in Revolutionary North of Mexico. Despite its fictional nature, it is believed that the film is based on real-life events. Zuzana M. Pick provides us with a glimpse of the themes from this film that was produced by Kalem Film Company in her book, "Constructing the Image of the Mexican Revolution: Cinema and the Archive."
Image Source: https://cinesilentemexicano.wordpress.com/2013/10/16/the-mexican-joan-of-arc-1911/
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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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By Source (WP:NFCC#4), Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=37249047
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
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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