Tepeyac (film)

Tepeyac (Spanish: El milagro de Tepeyac, lit.'The Miracle from Tepeyac') is a 1917 film directed by José Manuel Ramos, Carlos E. Gonzáles and Fernando Sáyago[1] rescued by Aurelio de los Reyes and restored by National Autonomous University of Mexico and was Mexico's only surviving Silent film in history.

Tepeyac
Directed byJosé Manuel Ramos
Carlos E. Gonzáles
Fernando Sáyago
Written byJosé Manuel Ramos
Carlos E. Gonzáles
Produced byEnrique Rosas
Starring
Production
company
Colonial
Release date
  • 1917 (1917)
Running time
64 min
CountryMexico

Plot

Lupita Flores knows her fiancé Carlos Fernández was in a boat sunk by a German submarine and she prays to the Virgin of Guadalupe.

Later on, she cannot sleep and she starts reading a book about the apparition of Tonantzin as the Virgin of Guadalupe.[2] The story follows Juan Diego, who sees a vision of the maiden at Tepeyac. Eventually, Carlos is saved and Lupita and Carlos go to Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe on December 12.

References

  1. David E. Wilt: The Mexican Filmography 1916 through 2001, McFarland & Co Inc, Jefferson NC 2004. p. 9.
  2. "LARR" (PDF). lasa-4.univ.pitt.edu.

Bibliography

  • David E. Wilt: The Mexican Filmography 1916 through 2001. McFarland & Co Inc, Jefferson NC 2004. ISBN 978-0-7864-6122-6
  • Rodrãguez, Paul A. Schroeder. “Latin American Silent Cinema: Triangulation and the Politics of Criollo Aesthetics.” Latin American Research Review, vol. 43, no. 3, 2008, pp. 33–58. JSTOR [JSTOR], doi:10.1353/lar.0.0049.


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