Viento salvaje

Viento salvaje (English: "Wild Wind") is a 1974 Mexican Western drama film directed by Zacarías Gómez Urquiza. It stars Eric del Castillo, Regina Torné, Víctor Junco, and Rosalba Brambila.[1]

Viento salvaje
Directed byZacarías Gómez Urquiza
Produced byVíctor Junco
Written byAntonio Orellana
StarringEric del Castillo
Regina Torné
Víctor Junco
Rosalba Brambila
Music byRaúl Lavista
CinematographyAgustín Jiménez
Edited byEufemio Rivera
Production
company
Estudios Churubusco Azteca S.A.
Release date
  • 28 February 1974 (1974-02-28) (Mexico)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryMexico
LanguageSpanish

Plot

Bandits rob a church and kidnap María (Brambila). Though the parish priest manages to accidentally kill one of bandits, the two surviving bandits, Sam (Víctor Junco) and Brazos (Tito Junco), rape Maria before selling her into sexual slavery at a brothel. There, the prostitute Verónica (Torné) instructs her in her trade.

Cast

  • Eric del Castillo as Father Sierra
  • Regina Torné as Verónica
  • Víctor Junco as Sam
  • Rosalba Brambila as María
  • Federico Falcón as Pájaro azul
  • Lina Montes as Pedro's wife
  • Raúl Pérez Prieto
  • Araceli Laiseka (as Aracely Layseka)
  • Ángel Di Stefani as Father Damián (as Angel De Stefani)
  • Tamara Garina as Veronica's Assistant
  • Regino Herrera as Matias
  • Rina Valdarno
  • Jacquelin Junco
  • Fernando Pinkus as Ricardo
  • Jesús Gómez as Deputy
  • Leonor Gómez as Old lady in church
  • Víctor Jordán
  • Nicolás Jasso
  • Marcelo Villamil as Sherriff
  • Eduardo Quintana
  • Rubén Márquez as Pedro
  • José Chávez
  • Tito Junco as Brazos
  • Gerardo Zepeda as Man in Canteen (uncredited)
gollark: The cabling is annoying, and also if you ever shut it down it's impossible to reactivate.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Triple stacked fusion reactors in a compact machine, 500kRF/t.
gollark: I've switched to Nuclearcraft.
gollark: You mean the GTech Fusotronic Reactotron?

References

  1. García Riera, p. 47

Bibliography

  • García Riera, Emilio. Historia documental del cine mexicano: 1972–1973. University of Guadalajara, 1992.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.