La perla

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This article is about the Mexican movie. For other uses, see La Perla .
La perla/the Pearl
Directed by Emilio Fernández
Produced by Águila Films
Written by John Steinbeck (adaptation by Emilio Fernández, John Steinbeck and Jackson Wagner)
Starring Pedro Armendáriz
María Elena Marqués
Fernando Wagner
Charles Rooner
Music by Antonio Díaz Conde
Cinematography Gabriel Figueroa
Editing by Gloria Schoemann
Release date(s) 1945
Running time 85 min.
Language 2 versions: Spanish and English
IMDb profile

La perla ("The pearl") is a 1945 production of the Cinema of Mexico. The story is based on the novel The Pearl, by John Steinbeck, who also co-wrote the screenplay for the movie.

In 1945, Emilio Fernández, who was in love with Olivia de Havilland (Gone with the Wind) thought she was the ideal actress to play the starring role of this movie. He planned to produce the film for Óscar Dancigers, the Franco-Russian head of Águila Films who had arrived in Mexico three years earlier escaping the horrors of war in Europe. Danciers prepared the production of the film with a script written by Fernández and Steinbeck, the author or the novel of the same name (The Pearl) in both Spanish and English versions.

After the success of this costly film, Dancigers, became one of the most important producers of the Cinema of Mexico and Fernández obtained international recognition. de Havilland never knew of the love of Fernández but he was able to get the government of Mexico City to change the name of the street he grew up on to Dulce Olivia ("Sweet Olivia").

Contents

[edit] Awards

[edit] Premio Ariel (1948)

Awarded

  • Emilio Fernández Ariel de Oro ("Golden Ariel")
  • Pedro Armendáriz (actor)
  • Juan García (supporting actor)
  • Gabriel Figueroa (photography)

Nominated

  • Gilberto González (supporting actor)
  • María Elena Marqués (actress)
  • Gloria Schoemann (editing)
  • Antonio Díaz Conde (score)
  • Emilio Fernández (screenplay)
  • Emilio Fernández (director)

[edit] Golden Globe 1949

  • Gabriel Figueroa (photography)

[edit] Venice Film Festival 1947

  • Emilio Fernández Golden Lion

[edit] Madrid Film Festival 1949

  • Gabriel Figueroa (photography)

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

In a fishing village, Kino (Armendáriz) and his wife Juana (Marqués) are in anguish because their little son was stung by a scorpion, the local doctor (a foreigner) refuses to treat the child and the boy is taken to a curandera. Later the doctor and his brother (Wagner), a loan shark meet Kino again, after he finds an expensive pearl and decide to steal it from him.

[edit] External links

In other languages