Vìctimas del Pecado

Vìctimas del Pecado
Directed by Emilio Fernández
Produced by Guillermo Calderòn
Pedro Calderòn
Written by Emilio Fernández
Mauricio Magdaleno
Starring Ninón Sevilla
Rodolfo Acosta
Tito Junco
Rita Montaner
Music by Antonio Díaz Conde
Cinematography Gabriel Figueroa
Editing by Gloria Schoemann
Distributed by Cinematográfica Calderón S.A
Running time 90 minutes
Country México
Language Spanish

Víctimas del Pecado (Victims of the Sin) is a 1951 Mexican film directed by Emilio Fernández and starring Ninón Sevilla.

Plot

In México City, a Cuban dancer from "Cabaret Changó" rescues a baby from a garbage can and decides to raise him, but her pachuco pimp gets in her way.

Immediately after Aventurera, Ninón Sevilla was top-billed in "Victimas del pecado" (1951). Powerfully directed and co-written by Emilio Fernández, here is a movie that almost tops its predecessor in noir ambiance and gritty effects. Particularly striking is the use of black smoke from passing trains to color Junco's cabaret which is literally located on the wrong side of the tracks. Our old friend, Rodolfo Acosta, gives his most chilling portrayal ever as the unscrupulous heavy whose flamboyant style is neatly contrasted by expressionless yet charismatic Tito Junco. Sevilla, of course, is once again in her element as the swirling dancer with a heart of gold, although Fernandez has obviously ensured that the musical numbers are more realistically presented. In fact, even the obligatory song by Pedro Vargas is better integrated into the narrative (even though introduced by an unlikely fanfare – what is Vargas doing in such a low dive? Slumming? And how come he brought his full orchestra with him?) and Vargas himself is much less stiff than usual. And, as might be expected, Figueroa's low-key photography is a stand-out, as are the gloriously cavernous, seedy sets designed by Manuel Fontanals. In the support cast, Rita Montaner is delightfully over-the-top (the sub-titles are rather bland compared to what she actually says), while Poncianito makes his shoeshine boy as solidly believable as Margarita Ceballos enacts her pitifully weak Rosa and Francisco Reiguera his squalidly hawkish yet often ineffective manager.

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