Los héroes del sitio de Zaragoza

Los héroes del sitio de Zaragoza is a 1903 Spanish short black-and-white silent film directed by Segundo de Chomón.

Los héroes del sitio de Zaragoza
Directed bySegundo de Chomón
Produced byMacaya y Marro
CinematographySegundo de Chomón
Production
company
Hispano Film
Release date
1903
Running time
3 minutes 25 seconds
CountrySpain
LanguageSilent

The film stages three of the national heroes of the 1808 First Siege of Zaragoza during the Spanish War of Independence.[1]

Plot

The film is composed of three scenes introduced by intertitles:

Scene 1: Condesa de Bureta

A sitting room. A man and a woman loading guns. A group of men wearing guns enter and shoot from the windows. Some of them are hit by shots from outside.

Scene 2: El tío Jorge

A courtyard with an arched gate. A group of armed men behind a makeshift barricade are discussing. Some women bring them food. Soldiers come running in from behind the camera and start shooting at other soldiers coming from the other side of the gate. The invading soldiers reach the barricade but they are pushed back and routed by the defenders encouraged by a man standing on the barricade.

Scene 3: Agustina de Aragón

A cannon served by two men, in front of city walls. Several men are shot dead. A woman enters and seeing the dead men shoots herself the cannon, creating a huge cloud of smoke. When the smoke dissipates, a group of men celebrating victory appears while the woman waves a flag at the top of the city walls.

Production

There are divergent views as to when this film was shot, the dates of 1901,[2] 1903[3] or 1905[4] having been mentioned. Réjane Hamus-Vallée argues that there is no evidence supporting the fact that Chomón would have directed any film before 1903. She considers that this film is the oldest preserved film directed by Segundo de Chomón and that it likely was the first one produced by the producers Macaya & Marro [5]

On the other hand, the style of the film, with single shot scenes and static frontal camera, seems to indicate that it was shot before Chomón's 1904 film El heredero de Casa Pruna which includes multishot scenes and camera panning.

Historical significance

The film stages three celebrated heroes of the Spanish resistance against the Napoleonic invasion:

María de la Consolación Azlor, Condesa de Bureta (es) created and directed the Cuerpo de Amazonas [Amazon Corps], a special female corps that provided relief to the wounded and supplied food and ammunition to the fighters. In addition, she turned her palace into a hospital, and took up arms at times of danger.

Jorge Ibor y Casamayor (es), known as Tío Jorge (Uncle George) played a major role in the defence of Saragossa. The city gave his name to a park in 1958.

Painting by Miguel Navarro Cañizares
Painting by Miguel Navarro Cañizares
Screenshot
Screenshot

Agustina Raimunda María Saragossa Doménech, known as Agustina de Aragón, was an active defensor of the city who has become famous for one particular action: On June 15, 1808, the French army stormed the Portillo, an ancient gateway into the city defended by a hodgepodge battery of old cannons and a heavily outnumbered volunteer unit. Agustina, arriving on the ramparts with a basket of apples to feed the gunners, watched the nearby defenders fall to French bayonets.

The Spanish troops broke ranks, having suffered heavy casualties, and abandoned their posts. With the French troops a few yards away, Agustina herself ran forward, loaded a cannon, and lit the fuse, shredding a wave of attackers at point-blank range. This action has been the subject of a monumental statue erected in Saragossa and of several paintings, which have inspired the design of the set for the film.

See also

References

  1. Review and link to watch the film in Spanish with English subtitles: "A cinema history". Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  2. José María Claver Esteban, Luces y rejas. Estereotipos andaluces en el cine costumbrista español (1896-1939),Centro de Estudios Andaluces, 2012, p. 212.
  3. Leonardo Romero Tobar, Temas literarios hispánicos (II), Prensas de la Universidad de Zaragoza, 2014, p. 371.
  4. Palmira González López, Los inicios del Cine en España (1896 - 1909), La llegada del cine, su expansión y primeras producciones, Liceus, p.33.
  5. Réjane Hamus-Vallée, Les mille et un visages de Segundo de Chomón: Truqueur, coloriste, cinématographiste... et pionnier du cinématographe, Presses Universitaires du Septentrion, 2020, p.26
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