Savage Pampas (1945 film) explained

Savage Pampas
Narrator:Enrique Muiño
Studio:Artistas Argentinos Asociados
Distributor:Artistas Argentinos Asociados
Runtime:98 minutes
Country:Argentina

Savage Pampas (Spanish; Castilian: '''Pampa bárbara''') is a 1945 Argentine historical film directed by Lucas Demare and Hugo Fregonese and starring Francisco Petrone, Luisa Vehil and Domingo Sapelli.[1] The film's sets were designed by Germán Gelpi. The film is set in the nineteenth century in the Dry Pampas, when it represented a frontier between Argentine-controlled territory and areas still largely inhabited by Indians before the Conquest of the Desert extended Argentine control southwards. In 1966, Fregonese remade the film in English under the same title.

In a survey of the 100 greatest films of Argentine cinema carried out by the Museo del Cine Pablo Ducrós Hicken in 2000, the film reached the 24th position.[2]

Synopsis

A tough captain of the Argentine Army doggedly battles a band of outlaws composed of a mixture of Indians and Argentine deserters.

Cast

References

  1. Rist p.74
  2. Las 100 mejores del periodo 1933-1999 del Cine Argentino. https://web.archive.org/web/20221121182959/https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ITZbOc_XZnbJ1W2a9Lq9Zk8xJRrWrzPg/view. 21 November 2022. 21 November 2022. 2000. 3. La Mirada Cautiva. Buenos Aires. Museo del Cine Pablo Ducrós Hicken. Encuesta de cine argentino 2022 on Google Drive. 6–14.

Bibliography