En un burro tres baturros

1939 Mexican film
  • 1939 (1939)
Running time
120 minutesCountryMexicoLanguageSpanish

En un burro tres baturros ("Three Peasants on a Donkey") is a 1939 Mexican film directed by José Benavides, Jr and is based on the play written by Alberto Novión.[1] It stars Carlos Orellana and Sara García and is Pedro Infante's first film, appearing as an extra.[2] Infante was also asked to overdub the singing for the jota, in place of Carlos López Moctezuma (who plays Alfredo).[3][4][5]

Plot

The film begins in Camarillas, the province of Teruel in the Aragon region of Spain. Three young men baturros (Aragonese peasants), Santiago, Isidro and El Perico, embark on a journey to Mexico to find better opportunities for themselves.[6] Santiago and Isidro are initially unable to convince El Perico to join them on their trip as his wife is pregnant and he is in poor health. El Perico's wife dies diving birth to their daughter, La Pilar which causes him to decide at the last minute to go with them to Mexico. After they arrive in Mexico, El Perico becomes ill, and just before dying he makes Santiago promise to be a father to La Pilar. Santiago and Isidro send for the girlfriends, Manuela and Antonia and marrying them by proxy, who bring La Pilar with them to Mexico.[7]

Cast

  • Carlos Orellana as Santiago Míguez
  • Joaquín Pardavé as Isidro Herráiz
  • José Pidal as El Perico
  • Sara García as Manuela
  • Carlos López Moctezuma as Alfredo
  • Victoria Alonso as La Pilara
  • Jorge Mairoz as Ramon
  • Conchita Gentil Arcos as Antonia Teruel
  • Elvia Salcedo as Laurita
  • Joaquín Coss as Padre de Santiago
  • Consuelo Segarra as Agustina - Madre de Isidro
  • Alfredo Varela as Sirviente de Santiago
  • Hernán Vera as Juéz en Aragón
  • Víctor Junco as Amigo de Alfredo en juerga
  • Victoria Arcos
  • Manuel Pozos
  • Pedro Infante

References

  1. ^ Novión, Alberto (1923). En un burro, tres baturros, comedia en tres actos. La Escena.
  2. ^ Curcio-Nagy, Linda A; Beezley, William H (2011). Latin American Popular Culture Since Independence, An Introduction. Lanham, MD, USA: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 236. ISBN 9781442212565. It includes his first cinematic incursion as an extra in En un burro tres baturros (1939) and his role as a Spaniard—dubbed by a Spanish actor—in La razon de la culpa (1942).
  3. ^ C., Peribanez (23 August 2020). "Una jota a la Virgen del Pilar con reminiscencias aztecas". Heraldo de Aragón. Aragón, Spain. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
  4. ^ Millán, Francisco Javier (13 November 2017). "Cuando baturros turolenses se codeaban con los mariachis en el cine mexicano (When Teruel baturros rubbed shoulders with mariachis in Mexican cinema)". Diario de Teruel. Teruel, Aragon, Spain. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
  5. ^ "Comunicación e ideología, Issue 1, Issues 3-4". Comunicación e ideología - 1974. Mexico: Unknown. 1974. p. 45. Retrieved 11 November 2020. De ahí fue invitado para que cantara en s películas En un burro tres baturros
  6. ^ Knapp Jones, Willis (2011). Behind Spanish American Footlights. Austin, TX, USA: University of Texas Press. p. 164. ISBN 9780292737242.
  7. ^ "En un burro tres baturros". mexicoescultura.com. México es Cultura. 28 December 2018. Retrieved 10 November 2020.

External links

  • En un burro tres baturros at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  • En un burro tres baturros in libraries (WorldCat catalog)


  • v
  • t
  • e