La otra mujer

La otra mujer (English: "The Other Woman") is a 1972 Mexican comedy drama film directed by Julián Soler and starring Mauricio Garcés, Saby Kamalich and María Duval.[1] The film is a remake of the Mexican film Mi esposa y la otra (1952), which in turn is a remake of the Argentine film The Kids Grow Up (1942).[2]

La otra mujer
Directed byJulián Soler
Written byEdmundo Báez (adaptation)
José Emilio Pacheco (dialogue)
Julián Soler (adaptation)
Produced byGregorio Walerstein
StarringMauricio Garcés
Saby Kamalich
Félix González
Paula Cusi
María Duval
José Luis Moreno
Delia Peña Orta
CinematographyXavier Cruz
Edited byMaximino Sánchez Molina
Music bySergio Guerrero (song "Una gota de miel")
Production
company
Cima Films
Release date
  • 20 July 1972 (1972-07-20) (Mexico)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryMexico
LanguageSpanish

Plot

Cristina (Saby Kamalich) and Ricardo (Félix González) have three children: Pablo (José Luis Moreno), Martha (Paula Cusi) and Claudia (Delia Peña Orta), but they are not married, because Ricardo is married to another woman, Alicia (María Duval). When he finds himself in a hurry when it seems that Alicia is going to find out about her secret life, Ricardo asks Alicia's cousin, Antonio (Mauricio Garcés), to help him by pretending to be Cristina's husband.

Cast

  • Mauricio Garcés as Antonio
  • Saby Kamalich as Cristina Martínez
  • Félix González as Ricardo
  • Paula Cusi as Martha
  • María Duval as Alicia
  • José Luis Moreno as Pablo
  • Delia Peña Orta as Claudia
  • Gilberto Román as Martha's Boyfriend
  • Jorge Patiño as Card Player
  • Jorge Fegan as Card Player
  • Inés Murillo as Sebastiana, maid
  • Víctor Alcocer
  • Luis Miranda
  • Dolores Camarillo
  • Sheila Donne as Mamacita Americana
  • Ana Lilia Tovar as Antonio's Girlfriend
  • Luciano Hernández de la Vega
  • Ricardo Adalid
  • Enrique Pontón

Reception

Comparing the film with its previous 1952 and 1942 film versions, Emilio García Riera said that the films of 1942 and 1952 were better.[2] Due to the scene that shows Garcés's character accompanied by an English-speaking blonde woman during a card game, in Stereotyped Images of United States Citizens in Mexican Cinema, 1930-1990, David E. Wilt cited the film as one of the films in Mexican cinema that extolled the figure of the blonde woman as an object of desire in Mexico.[3]

References

  1. García Riera, Emilio (1990). Los hermanos Soler (in Spanish). Universidad de Guadalajara, Centro de Investigación y Enseñanza Cinematográficas. pp. 268–270. ISBN 968-895-090-4.
  2. García Riera, Emilio (1992). Historia documental del cine mexicano: 1970-1971 (in Spanish). Universidad de Guadalajara. p. 188. ISBN 968-895-343-1. Las versiones de 1942 y 1951 resultaron no sólo mejores […] [The 1942 and 1951 versions were not only better […]]
  3. Wilt, David E. (1992). Stereotyped Images of United States Citizens in Mexican Cinema, 1930-1990. University of Maryland at College Park. p. 260. These types of roles reinforce the image of the Blonde as a character whose primary function is sexual, even before she takes any assertive action. But in Mexican cinema the male rarely has to make the first move, since the Blonde actively seeks out sexual partners, […] therefore is subjected to frequent propositions, comments and looks by the male characters in the film. She is often treated as little more than a chattel, a plaything, a piece of common property. In La Otra Mujer (The Other Woman, 1971), [sic] for instance, gambler Antonio (Mauricio Garcés) is playing cards with several other men in his hotel suite. Antonio is accompanied by an English-speaking Blonde. […]
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