The Lioness of Castille explained

The Lioness of Castille
Director:Juan de Orduña
Editing:Petra de Nieva
Studio:CIFESA
Distributor:CIFESA
Runtime:106 minutes
Country:Spain

The Lioness of Castille (Spanish: La leona de Castilla) is a 1951 Spanish historical drama film directed by Juan de Orduña and starring Amparo Rivelles, Virgílio Teixeira and Alfredo Mayo. De Orduña had directed a number of the most expensive Spanish costume films of the era for the leading studio CIFESA. The film portrays the sixteenth century noblewoman María Pacheco, in a fictitious story that has her battling foreign agents during the reign of Charles V.[1]

Synopsis

After his defeat in the Battle of Villalar, Juan de Padilla, chief of the comuneros, is executed by beheading together with Juan Bravo and Francisco Maldonado in the presence of his wife María de Pacheco and his son. After that they swear, before the Council of the city of Toledo, to avenge her death and continue the war against Carlos I. She is a Castilian lady of high rank, with fragile health but strong character who reacts heroically and participates in dangerous combats against the tyranny of King Carlos I, becoming the Leona de Castilla, a symbol of oppressed popular freedoms.[2]

References

  1. Bentley p.101
  2. Web site: 2020-04-28 . María Pacheco, la última rebelde de los comuneros: historia olvidada de "la leona de Castilla" . 2022-06-07 . El Español . es.

Bibliography