Cantaclaro
{{Infobox film
| name = Cantaclaro
| image =
| caption =
| director = Julio Bracho
| producer = Francis Alstock
| writer = Rómulo Gallegos (novel)
Jesús Cárdenas
Julio Bracho
| starring = Esther Fernandez
Antonio Badú
Alberto Galán
| music = Manuel Esperón
| cinematography = Gabriel Figueroa
| editing = Gloria Schoemann
| studio = Producciones Interamericanas
| distributor =
| released = {{Film date|1946|01|29|df=yes}}
| runtime =
| country = Mexico
| language = Spanish
| budget =
| gross =
}}
Cantaclaro is a 1946 Mexican drama film directed by Julio Bracho and starring Esther Fernandez, Antonio Badú and Alberto Galán. The film is based on the 1934 novel of the same name by Rómulo Gallegos. The film's sets were designed by the art director Jesús Bracho, who was the younger brother of Julio Bracho.{{cite book|last1=Ibarra|first1=Jesús|title=Los Bracho: tres generaciones de cine mexicano|date=2006|publisher=UNAM|isbn=970-32-3074-1|page=222|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=twzhutuv5eUC&q=Cantaclaro&pg=PA222|language=es}}
Plot
Florentino (Antonio Badú), nicknamed "Cantaclaro", after saving his family's lands, goes to the plains to learn more songs to sing. There he falls in love with Rosángela (Esther Fernandez), a young woman surrounded by many secrets.
Cast
- Esther Fernandez as Rosangela / Angela Rosa
- Antonio Badú as Florentino Coronado Cantaclaro
- Alberto Galán as Doctor Juan Crisostomo Payara
- Paco Fuentes as Juan Parado
- Rafael Lanzetta as Guarriqueño
- Fanny Schiller as Doña Nico
- Rafael Alcayde as Carlos Jaramillo
- Ángel T. Sala as Coronel Buitrago
- Alejandro Ciangherotti as Juan el Veguero
- Maruja Grifell as Nana
- Arturo Soto Rangel as Don Aquilino
- Gilberto González
- Salvador Quiroz
- Roberto Cañedo
Production
The film was made as part of a spate of film adaptations of Rómulo Gallegos's novels following success of Doña Bárbara (1943).{{cite book|last1=Sadlier|first1=Darlene J.|title=Latin American Melodrama: Passion, Pathos, and Entertainment|date=2010|publisher=University of Illinois Press|isbn=978-0-252-09232-9|page=36|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I7xoXDdXBscC&q=cantaclaro+1946&pg=PA36}}
Cantaclaro began filming in June 1945, after Julio Bracho made The White Monk. An American envoy from 20th Century Fox, Francis Alstock, boyfriend of actress Esther Fernandez, who starred in the film, featured as executive producer. It features filming locations in Veracruz.
Reception
In Los Bracho: tres generaciones de cine mexicano, Jesús Ibarra states that at the time of the film's premiere, "the critics were divided their opinions and the public did not like it," stating that "despite the beautiful and fluid language, the dialogues were long and the film a bit boring," with Global Mexican Cinema: Its Golden Age citing that "some contemporary critics have generally labeled Cantaclaro, along with most or all of the Gallegos films, 'mediocre'".{{cite book|last1=Ricalde|first1=Maricruz|last2=Irwin|first2=Robert McKee|title=Global Mexican Cinema: Its Golden Age|date=2019|publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing|isbn=9781838715960|page=193|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bVjyDwAAQBAJ&q=Cantaclaro&pg=PT193}} However, Ibarra also stated that with the film "the same thing happened as with The White Monk; Bracho made art cinema, not suitable for the Mexican public in general", going so far as to argue, when mentioning that the film won fewer Ariel Awards than Emilio Fernández's film Enamorada that year, that Bracho's film was "much more worthy of being awarded" than Fernández's film.{{cite book|last1=Ibarra|first1=Jesús|title=Los Bracho: tres generaciones de cine mexicano|date=2006|publisher=UNAM|isbn=970-32-3074-1|pages=126–127|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=twzhutuv5eUC&q=Cantaclaro&pg=PA126|language=es}}
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{IMDb title|0218075}}
Category:1940s Spanish-language films
Category:Films directed by Julio Bracho
Category:Films based on Venezuelan novels
Category:Mexican black-and-white films
Category:Spanish-language drama films
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