The Voice of My City

The Voice of My City (Spanish: La Voz de mi ciudad) is a 1953 Argentine musical comedy film directed by Tulio Demicheli and starring Mariano Mores and Diana Maggi.[1]

La Voz de mi ciudad
Directed byTulio Demicheli
Produced byEduardo Bedoya
Written byTulio Demicheli
Music byMariano Mores
CinematographyFrancis Boeniger
Edited byRicardo Rodríguez Nistal, Atilio Rinaldi
Distributed byArtistas Argentinos Asociados
Release date
1953
Running time
110 minutes
CountryArgentina
LanguageSpanish

Plot

Roberto Moran (Mariano Mores) has just arrived in Buenos Aires from the provinces to work in a foundry. He can play the bandoneón by ear but wants to have proper training in music at a conservatory run by a frustrated old musician, Don Matias (Ricardo Galache). The old man first rejects both Roberto and his instrument, but after hearing him play, he changes his mind and takes him on, though forbidding him to play popular music, which he despises.

Roberto becomes a great classical pianist, but as he acquires proficiency, he secretly composes tangos too. One of the best sequences shows him informally playing the Argentine "Taquito Militar" accompanied by the other students playing their classical instruments (violin, clarinet, harp).

Roberto wins a scholarship to go to Europe to further his success as a pianist but he turns it down, preferring to compose "music that reveals the soul of the city". "The day will come," he tells the conductor Aquiles Baldi (Orestes Soriani), "when your great orchestra will play this kind of music."

A conflict arises with the arrival of factory owner, Francisco Romani (Santiago Gómez Cou), a calculating authoritarian who admires the United States. Roberto and Romani are both interested in Isabel (Diana Maggi), the conservatory director's daughter, who is torn between staying with the infatuated young musician who loves her or opting for the affluence of his more mature opponent. At the end of the film the roles are reversed: while Roberto achieves both popular success and the support of the "cult", showing his old master he can indeed express the "voice of the city", the entrepreneur is finally revealed to be a worthy suitor, full of feeling, who can succeed in winning the heart of the young woman.

Cast

  • Mariano Mores, as Roberto Morán
  • Diana Maggi, as Isabel, daughter of the director of the Conservatory
  • Santiago Gómez Cou as Francisco Romani
  • Ricardo Galache as Don Matías, director of the Conservatory
  • Virginia de la Cruz as Dorita, girlfriend of Jorge
  • Enrique Lucero as Jorge, brother of Roberto
  • Orestes Soriani as Maestro Aquiles Baldi
  • Susana Vargas
  • Alberto Dalbes as band leader
  • Domingo Mania as secretary of Don Romani
  • Jorge Leval
  • Tito Grassi
  • Mario Fortuna as Martín Baigorria, clarinetist
  • Lois Blue
  • Rodolfo Salerno as Juan the violinist
  • Elena Cruz as Angélica, the harpist
  • Aldo Vega as violinist
  • Carlos Escobares
  • Francisco Canaro
  • Juan D'Arienzo
  • Lois Blue Faure
gollark: They can do some object manipulation tasks which computer things can't, which is useful in slavery I guess, but most of the useful features of humans versus robots or computer systems are in high-level and abstract thinking, which slavery underutilizes.
gollark: And they're inefficient and bad at menial labour.
gollark: Oh, so now you need twice the food and twice the humans, great.
gollark: As I said, humans require sleep and probably other stuff for long-term function, they're just not good for slave-type tasks.
gollark: You're still having to provide food, and humans do respiration and whatnot which make carbon dioxide.

References

  1. "La voz de mi ciudad" (in Spanish). Cinenacional.com. Retrieved 28 March 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.